
































“It is curious that people tend to regard government as a quasi-divine, selfless, Santa Claus organization. Government was constructed neither for ability nor for the exercise of loving care; government was built for the use of force and for necessarily demagogic appeals for votes. If individuals do not know their own interests in many cases, they are free to turn to private experts for guidance. It is absurd to say that they will be served better by a coercive, demagogic apparatus.”
— Murray N. Rothbard



Pancakes and squirrel farts, Michelle Obama 100 years! Jobs!
“Covid has taken this year, just since the outbreak, has taken more than 100 year, look, here’s, the lives, it’s just, when you think about it. More lives this year than any other year for the past 100 years.” – Joe Biden 8/24/20 (leader of the free world)












It seems appropriate somehow that Charlton Heston’s post apocalyptic epic Omega Man is playing this Sunday morning. Large parts of America are now engulfed in lawless anarchy. Everywhere the BLM/Antifa terrorists have exerted their influence they seem to have defeated the hapless police. Like the terrorists themselves, police act real tough when they have a numbers or weapons advantage. But when the odds are somewhat even, the cops cower in helplessness.
On most sites the commentary dismisses this as the disgruntled lashing out of a few malcontents. Nobody is looking at why this is happening. The picture above is of 17 year old Kyle Rittenhouse. As someone put it, the police have abandoned the streets to the terrorists, and its a few brave people like Kyle standing up for civilization. The Democrats want as much chaos as possible before the election. They are helping the anarchy by their passivity.
That is one of the funniest things out of all this, just how incapable the cops are. They think they’re going to die stopping a little 73 year old lady for a speeding ticket. I can imagine how terrified they are with angry armed organized young adults operating in the darkness. I often wonder what cops think they were hiring on for? The majority of them don’t seem emotionally capable for the job at hand.
But back to the why. Big societal movements die out if they don’t have traction, an underlying reason to exist. Undergirding all this is communism (socialism, whatever). Our leaders like to pretend America is the land of laissez faire free market capitalism. Bullshit, never has been, never will be. We operate under a system of corporatism. Corporations own Congress. Anybody that doesn’t admit that is a liar or a fool.
During the good times there was enough to go around for everybody. But now things are getting stretched. The pendulum swung too far away from the people. We’re trying to take in the world in our immigration system on top of our outlandish guest worker programs. Our regulatory and tax structures encouraged our tax base of good jobs to go to China and Mexico. We’re still trying to be the world’s policeman.
It was too much. Karma’s a bitch. They wouldn’t play fair with people, and now some of those people are trying to replace the system.

What’s funny is this movie is nearly 50 years old.
“The Omega Man is a 1971 American post-apocalyptic action film directed by Boris Sagal and starring Charlton Heston as a survivor of a global pandemic. It was written by John William Corrington and Joyce Corrington, based on the 1954 novel I Am Legend by the American writer Richard Matheson. The film’s producer, Walter Seltzer, went on to work with Heston again in the dystopian science-fiction film Soylent Green in 1973.”











“A Pale Rider came out of Younkers, to make civilization’s last stand! The enemy could not withstand his charge!”













In 2010 I could tell by my site traffic that Google had turned out the lights on me. Traffic plummeted. To this day squat comes from Google. I have noticed Duck Duck Go has an honest search engine. On certain searches I will appear on page 1 with them, I don’t show up on the first 5 pages with Google. That’s bias.
“To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize.”

‘They Live‘ was a fun little movie with a very likeable guy by the name of Roddy Piper. Roddy was a Canadian “wrestler” for probably 30 years (its a little hard to nail down). He was a also a boxer and a Judo blackbelt. I always like guys like him. I’d heard the name but didn’t know who he was when I saw the 1988 movie ‘They Live’ several years after it came out. Never have seen the whole thing I don’t think.
The premise is pretty simple, ‘Nada’ is given a pair of sunglasses from an old geezer on his deathbed that allows him to see past the aliens façade that are controlling society from key positions in academia, media, business, politics and the like. They have infiltrated culture and with their subliminal messaging are controlling America.
When I first saw it I thought it was a metaphor for Jewish control of banking, media, foundations and the like. A reviewer on IMDB thought it was “obviously” a reaction to the consumerism of the Reagan 80’s. Which would be a stretch, since the John Carpenter film was based on a 1963 short story. I like my idea better.
Either way its a simple and interesting premise that works for a number of circumstances. The latest was when I read Andrew Torba on Gab lamenting the failures of the Republican Party. I simply pointed out to him (40ish) that when you get old the blinders come off and you can see clearly that its all been a farce. I have my own pair of “sunglasses” now.

These the Protocols of the Elders of Zion I have never seen before. I’ve always heard them described of course as “anti-Semitic“, but never have I actually seen what all the hubbub was about. It looks perfectly reasonable to me, from this list at least. I have not seen the actual book.












Republicans kickoff their convention.






David Jeremiah: “Don’t let the sun go down on your anger.”
Man: “We haven’t slept for 2 weeks.”
“No one can read our Constitution without concluding that the
people who wrote it wanted their government severely limited;
the words ‘no’ and ‘not’ employed in restraint of government
power occur 24 times in the first seven articles of the
Constitution and 22 more times in the Bill of Rights.”
— Rev. Edmund A. Opitz
(1914-2006)










