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Forwarded from Dr. Edward Group, DC
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What an incredible achievement — congratulations to my friend Del Bigtree and his team for winning Best of Festival at the Malibu Film Festival for “An Inconvenient Study.” 👏

This film is more than an award winner — it’s a turning point. It asks the questions most are too afraid to ask, and it does so with courage, transparency, and undeniable data.

We can’t heal what we refuse to see. The truth must always come before transformation. 🌿

Watch the full film free at 👉 AnInconvenientStudy.com

— Dr. Edward Group, DC
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Forwarded from David Avocado Wolfe
40 skills to teach your kids.
Join: @davidavocadowolfe 🥑
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Forwarded from Zeee Media 🎙
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BlackRock CEO Larry Fink says this is only the beginning as the tokenization of everything is underway.

Money, property, and even personal identity will soon exist in digital form.

He calls it a major opportunity for BlackRock, saying the plan is to move beyond traditional financial assets by digitally re-potting them into a new system.

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Audio + English transcript from the closed-door July 9, 2025 court hearing in the case against the perpetrators of the Covid-19 democide in the Netherlands.
https://sashalatypova.substack.com/p/audio-english-transcript-from-the
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Forwarded from Homestead 2.0
🌆 The Experiment on the Poor — or Why American Cities Don’t Look Like Post-Soviet Ones

Once upon a time, in the heart of America, there was a dream — noble, kind, and terribly naïve.
The dream said: “If we give every poor man a roof, he will become happy and good.”
It sounded so right that no one dared to question it.

After the Great Depression, President Roosevelt built little cottages for those who had lost everything.
They were small, warm houses with front porches, gardens, and even bathtubs — symbols of human dignity.
People moved in, planted flowers, painted fences, and began to live again.
For a short while, it worked. Poverty seemed almost defeated.

But the country grew impatient.
It wanted faster progress, larger numbers, grander ideas.
By the 1950s, the little homes gave way to towers — tall, efficient, and soulless.
Whole neighborhoods of concrete were raised for the poor: thirty-three high-rises, glowing with hope and bureaucracy.
The greatest of them all was called Pruitt-Igoe, built in St. Louis — a “city of the future,” where poverty would finally disappear.

The architect believed that bright corridors and shared spaces would teach people friendship.
That if walls were clean and lights were strong, human nature would improve.
But the Earth was missing. There was no soil to touch, no tree to care for, no quiet corner that said “mine.”
The human soul cannot bloom in air-conditioned boxes.

At first the families moved in — single mothers, the elderly, young students — grateful and full of faith.
But the spirit of the place was wrong.
The gardens were gone, the air smelled of dust and fear, and in those endless hallways people began to lose the thread that tied them to life.
Without roots, love withered. Without purpose, men became angry.
And soon, the bright towers turned dark.
Violence replaced laughter. Lights were smashed, elevators became traps, the police stopped coming.
A paradise of compassion turned into a fortress of despair.

By the 1970s, Pruitt-Igoe was a ghost of its own promise.
The government finally decided to destroy what it had created.
The towers were blown up one by one, like giant tombstones for a beautiful lie.

The lesson was silent but clear:
You cannot save a human being by separating him from the Earth.
You can feed his body, but if his hands have nowhere to plant and his heart has no land to love — he will starve in spirit.

That is why our ancestors built homesteads, not towers.
They knew that every family needs its own space of love — a piece of land that mirrors their soul.
There, a man feels responsible. There, a woman’s tenderness becomes creation, not survival.
There, a child learns that the world is not a cage, but a living garden.

Homestead 2.0 is not an escape from modern life — it is its healing.
It is the answer to the experiment that failed.
A reminder that the human being does not evolve in concrete.
He evolves in love, in sunlight, in the rhythm of living Earth.
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The reason why they don't want anyone growing their own food.

You think the food is still food but they are working on things such as inserting viral genes into fruits and veggies.

Teaching lettuce to mimic medicine. Turning tomatoes into immunization delivery systems, and who knows what else.

They call it innovation, it's for the betterment of society, they say.

But what happens when the boundary between food and pharmaceutical drug disappears? When tomatoe can alter your biology? When you no longer consent to what enters your body because you can’t even tell what’s been modified anymore?

This isn’t science fiction. They’re already doing it. Hidden behind terms like "molecular farming" and "biofortification."

Sadly the war on nature began when they started removing seeds from them, this should be all the more reason to start growing your own food & buy heirloom seeds.

Thank you for your time,

Niko

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Forwarded from HISTORY
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They're ALL poison! Every single one.

Join us: HISTORY 📜
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How Self Assembling Nanotechnology In the Body Can Make You More Susceptible To Solar Flares Affecting Heart Health, Causing Hypertension, Arrhythmia, Heart Failure And Sudden Cardiac Death
https://anamihalceamdphd.substack.com/p/how-self-assembling-nanotechnology
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2025/10/21 16:31:07
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