"I once said in a sermon that the Prince of Darkness was able to rule our lives 100% because we had fallen to him. I got an outraged phone call the next day: 'How did you arrive at that theology? You said not once but twice that we have fallen to the Prince of Darkness and that he rules our lives 100%. No, there's only One Who has power over our lives.'
I replied, 'You'd better not criticize me for things beyond your ken. What I said is in the Bible.' I gave the caller a couple of Scripture references. The caller said, 'I'll go and look them up.' — 'Too late,' I said; 'you should have done that first. You mustn't just shoot your mouth off about things you know nothing about.'"
Rev. A. Schultink, Rhenen, Netherlands
I replied, 'You'd better not criticize me for things beyond your ken. What I said is in the Bible.' I gave the caller a couple of Scripture references. The caller said, 'I'll go and look them up.' — 'Too late,' I said; 'you should have done that first. You mustn't just shoot your mouth off about things you know nothing about.'"
Rev. A. Schultink, Rhenen, Netherlands
👍2
Eastern Approaches—Alex Thomson
Voice message
Principle 8 of 286. All legislative power is for Parliament/Congress. Don’t let the courts or executive legislate, including by secret international accord. If necessary, overturn unlawful law from below, by juries and by local assemblies.
👍2
For those who don't follow sources in Russian, it's becoming increasingly apparent that the CSTO (largely Russian and Belarusian) forces brought in to Kazakhstan, and (as in this clip) the Kazakhs' own counter-terrorism forces, have real battles on their hands in the east of the country, which the City of London appears to have been planning to use as a "lily pad" stuffed with pan-Turkic head-choppers to penetrate China via Uyghur territory (Xinjiang).
👍6
Forwarded from Intel Slava
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
🇰🇿 Operation of the Special Forces Service "A" of the KNB of Kazakhstan to neutralize the cells of the Islamists
👍3
Serious comments requested:
Does this 2019 paper constitute good evidence that asymptomatic spread of respiratory virus infection is normal and common?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6518513/
Does this 2019 paper constitute good evidence that asymptomatic spread of respiratory virus infection is normal and common?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6518513/
PubMed Central (PMC)
Rates of asymptomatic respiratory virus infection across age groups
Respiratory viral infections are a leading cause of disease worldwide. A variety of respiratory viruses produce infections in humans with effects ranging from asymptomatic to life-treathening. Standard surveillance systems typically only target severe ...
👍2
Forwarded from Robin Monotti + Cory Morningstar
Reminder that "Health Canada" is largely funded by the pharmaceutical industry.
👍3
Forwarded from Coreys Digs
🚨 PART 5 Just published!
ALERT: 2030 Psychological Agenda – Obedience Training for PreK-Adults Already Global with Billions in Funding for Full Control – Part 5: U.S. Dept. of Education & Multiple Agencies Involved https://www.coreysdigs.com/education-system/alert-2030-psychological-agenda-obedience-training-for-prek-adults-already-global-with-billions-in-funding-for-full-control-part-5-u-s-dept-of-education-multiple-agencies-inv/
From Academics to Brainwashing:
• U.S. Department of Education
• U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
• CDC
• National Science Foundation
• OECD
• DARPA
• UNESCO
• UN
• WHO
They all want to control your mind, and your children's minds.
ALERT: 2030 Psychological Agenda – Obedience Training for PreK-Adults Already Global with Billions in Funding for Full Control – Part 5: U.S. Dept. of Education & Multiple Agencies Involved https://www.coreysdigs.com/education-system/alert-2030-psychological-agenda-obedience-training-for-prek-adults-already-global-with-billions-in-funding-for-full-control-part-5-u-s-dept-of-education-multiple-agencies-inv/
From Academics to Brainwashing:
• U.S. Department of Education
• U.S. Department of Health & Human Services
• CDC
• National Science Foundation
• OECD
• DARPA
• UNESCO
• UN
• WHO
They all want to control your mind, and your children's minds.
coreysdigs.com
ALERT: 2030 Psychological Agenda – Obedience Training for...
The 2030 Agenda on PreK-Adult lifelong obedience through SEL programs is supported by the U.S. Dept. of Education and multiple agencies.
👍6
Five minutes before the end of today's UK Column News, Mike Robinson justifiably compared the NATO protection racket with the Sinn Féin-IRA protection racket.
Our Irish subscribers are presumably constitutionalists and real patriots, and I don't think they'll be up in arms (pardon the pun) about this aperçu. It was the Anglo-American Establishment (not my term but that of Bill Clinton's history tutor) that wound up the Troubles right around the time it was setting up the new Strategy of Tension gang and counter-gang (namely "Muslims" vs. "White Supremacists").
It was the same Anglo-American deep state, using the same techniques (pederasty-based kompromat featuring prominently in the mix), that wound up the Cold War when Marxism had been sufficiently embedded in the West's mainstream institutions to justify the jettisoning of the Soviet stage of the project.
Sinn Féin now advocates the Anglo-American Establishment's talking points, every one of which takes a hot dump on Bunreacht na hÉireann and the continued existence of the Irish nation:
- de-facto NATO membership (via the EU's PESCO)
- unrestricted immigration
- overtures to the Commonwealth
- marking the Twelfth of July as an insincere gesture to the Ulster Protestants
- abortion
- the scrapping of parental rights
- invent-your-gender
- 'marriage' of two men and of two women
https://www.ukcolumn.org/ukcolumn-news/uk-column-news-10th-january-2022
Our Irish subscribers are presumably constitutionalists and real patriots, and I don't think they'll be up in arms (pardon the pun) about this aperçu. It was the Anglo-American Establishment (not my term but that of Bill Clinton's history tutor) that wound up the Troubles right around the time it was setting up the new Strategy of Tension gang and counter-gang (namely "Muslims" vs. "White Supremacists").
It was the same Anglo-American deep state, using the same techniques (pederasty-based kompromat featuring prominently in the mix), that wound up the Cold War when Marxism had been sufficiently embedded in the West's mainstream institutions to justify the jettisoning of the Soviet stage of the project.
Sinn Féin now advocates the Anglo-American Establishment's talking points, every one of which takes a hot dump on Bunreacht na hÉireann and the continued existence of the Irish nation:
- de-facto NATO membership (via the EU's PESCO)
- unrestricted immigration
- overtures to the Commonwealth
- marking the Twelfth of July as an insincere gesture to the Ulster Protestants
- abortion
- the scrapping of parental rights
- invent-your-gender
- 'marriage' of two men and of two women
https://www.ukcolumn.org/ukcolumn-news/uk-column-news-10th-january-2022
UKColumn
UK Column News - 10th January 2022
👍6
Forwarded from Morgoth's Review
With people such as Robert Malone and Mike Yeadon finally being given mainstream platforms I'm starting to see a trend emerge where many people online become bored with them and are now calling Malone in particular a shill.
I'm delighted and somewhat relieved that subjects such as the efficacy of the vaccines, side effects, digital ID's and the technocratic power-grab are entering mainstream discourse but for online subcultures this often means they've lost the monopoly on their own ''truth''.
And so we enter a situation where the largest podcast in the world platforms a man who alleges a crime against humanity is taking place, that there's mass corruption and deaths, but by doing so the issues raised become normie-tier, passe, old. Like when people go off an Indie band after they hit the big-time.
Yet the implications of this going forward are that public trust in western institutions and authorities could collapse entirely with consequences we can only guess at, in the internet age though, it's all just entertainment and there's always another novelty take out there to titillate, the next new thing.
I'm delighted and somewhat relieved that subjects such as the efficacy of the vaccines, side effects, digital ID's and the technocratic power-grab are entering mainstream discourse but for online subcultures this often means they've lost the monopoly on their own ''truth''.
And so we enter a situation where the largest podcast in the world platforms a man who alleges a crime against humanity is taking place, that there's mass corruption and deaths, but by doing so the issues raised become normie-tier, passe, old. Like when people go off an Indie band after they hit the big-time.
Yet the implications of this going forward are that public trust in western institutions and authorities could collapse entirely with consequences we can only guess at, in the internet age though, it's all just entertainment and there's always another novelty take out there to titillate, the next new thing.
👍36
Regarding the chats under my posts:
— I promise that I will always read each one.
— I won't reply directly to people's requests to talk more about a certain issue, since if I start I'll never have any time left for anything else, but I will certainly take note of what you're requesting and observing in these comments, to respond to in my future output, God willing.
— I leave it to this very generously and diversely gifted audience to help each other out in the chat with links to resources that I've alluded to, translations of texts mentioned, etc.
— I will only remove comments and block subscribers that are flat-out advertising a product, service or platform that is irrelevant to the post, particularly if it's done shoutily (bold type, all-caps, emojis). (Only done this once so far.)
— I expect you not to use bad language in your comments.
— More gently than the above, but nevertheless sincerely, I request that you not make comments or leave links that are clearly not at all germane to the original post. It irritates a substantial number of readers.
— I promise that I will always read each one.
— I won't reply directly to people's requests to talk more about a certain issue, since if I start I'll never have any time left for anything else, but I will certainly take note of what you're requesting and observing in these comments, to respond to in my future output, God willing.
— I leave it to this very generously and diversely gifted audience to help each other out in the chat with links to resources that I've alluded to, translations of texts mentioned, etc.
— I will only remove comments and block subscribers that are flat-out advertising a product, service or platform that is irrelevant to the post, particularly if it's done shoutily (bold type, all-caps, emojis). (Only done this once so far.)
— I expect you not to use bad language in your comments.
— More gently than the above, but nevertheless sincerely, I request that you not make comments or leave links that are clearly not at all germane to the original post. It irritates a substantial number of readers.
👍30
How sweet and awful is the place with Christ within the doors,
while everlasting love displays the choicest of her stores!
Here ev'ry bowel of our God with soft compassion rolls;
here peace and pardon bought with blood is food for dying souls.
While all our hearts and all our songs join to admire the feast,
each of us cry, with thankful tongues, "Lord, why was I a guest?
Why was I made to hear thy voice, and enter while there's room,
when thousands make a wretched choice, and rather starve than come?"
'Twas that same love that spread the feast that sweetly forc'd us in,
else we had still refus'd to taste, and perish'd in our sin.
Pity the nations, O our God; constrain the earth to come;
send thy victorious Word abroad, and bring the strangers home.
We long to see thy churches full, that all the chosen race
may with one voice, and heart, and soul, sing thy redeeming grace.
Isaac Watts
while everlasting love displays the choicest of her stores!
Here ev'ry bowel of our God with soft compassion rolls;
here peace and pardon bought with blood is food for dying souls.
While all our hearts and all our songs join to admire the feast,
each of us cry, with thankful tongues, "Lord, why was I a guest?
Why was I made to hear thy voice, and enter while there's room,
when thousands make a wretched choice, and rather starve than come?"
'Twas that same love that spread the feast that sweetly forc'd us in,
else we had still refus'd to taste, and perish'd in our sin.
Pity the nations, O our God; constrain the earth to come;
send thy victorious Word abroad, and bring the strangers home.
We long to see thy churches full, that all the chosen race
may with one voice, and heart, and soul, sing thy redeeming grace.
Isaac Watts
❤9👍8
Poll with multiple answers possible.
If Alex starts a Saturday Bible study on this channel, it should:
If Alex starts a Saturday Bible study on this channel, it should:
Final Results
39%
Be consecutive (passage by passage through a book of the Bible)
46%
Be thematic (issue by issue)—PLEASE NOTE: THIS OPTION IS MUTUALLY EXCLUSIVE WITH 'CONSECUTIVE'
1%
Devote no attention to the original languages of the Bible
26%
Devote ad-hoc attention to the original languages of the Bible (etymological-level explanations)
39%
Devote regular attention to the original languages of the Bible (grammar-/idiom-level explanations)
19%
Devote large attention to the original languages of the Bible (effectively teaching Hebrew & Greek)
15%
Spend the latter half of the hour on Q&A
18%
Spend the last twenty minutes on Q&A
23%
Spend the last quarter-hour on Q&A
18%
Spend the last ten minutes on Q&A
👍10
In his transcripts of Millenniyule, Katana17 has got to @Radical_Liberation — who is now a subscriber to this channel. Radical Liberation is the son of a missionary to the Jews. The only word that defeated the transcriber was Kirkcudbright.
RadLib’s and his wife’s commendable achievement of having eight children is rare in the US, eye-rollingly exceptional in Britain and the white Commonwealth, but still common in the Dutch Bible Belt. The church where I’m a deacon is only seventy strong (a tiny congregation size in Dutch Reformed terms) but has three families of that size.
https://katana17.com/2022/01/01/millennial-woes-millenniyule-2021-12-radical-liberation-dec-15-2021-transcript/
RadLib’s and his wife’s commendable achievement of having eight children is rare in the US, eye-rollingly exceptional in Britain and the white Commonwealth, but still common in the Dutch Bible Belt. The church where I’m a deacon is only seventy strong (a tiny congregation size in Dutch Reformed terms) but has three families of that size.
https://katana17.com/2022/01/01/millennial-woes-millenniyule-2021-12-radical-liberation-dec-15-2021-transcript/
👍2
I warmly recommend that you subscribe to Radical Liberation (channel here on Telegram).
Forwarded from Radical Liberation
Reading more of this article that Alex Thomson pointed to.
That dawning realization that the elite aren't the smart folks I once thought they were keeps getting stronger.
https://t.me/EastApp/188
That dawning realization that the elite aren't the smart folks I once thought they were keeps getting stronger.
https://t.me/EastApp/188
👍8
Eastern Approaches—Alex Thomson
Serious comments requested: Does this 2019 paper constitute good evidence that asymptomatic spread of respiratory virus infection is normal and common? https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6518513/
Subscriber's response:
In this study a PCR test was used to detect infection. (Methodology – Specimen Collection and Analysis; in basic English: we took a swab sample from participants — from the nose — twice a week and tested it using a PCR test).
1. A PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) test does not check for a virus, but only for a bit/bits of its genetic code (RNA/DNA). If you want to see a virus, you have to do a culture; you have to grow it on a cell culture. The only result of the PCR test is: I have found the bit I was looking for (with such and such certainty). Nothing else. One cannot infer anything based on this knowledge alone. It would be a parallel to: I have found a footprint in the street, maybe there was a crime committed, and I will solve it.
2. PCR is not a quantitative test; it only says if what I'm looking for is there or not, it does not say how much of it is there. Why is this important? Let’s say the immune system is like an army. One enemy soldier will be easily defeated, while whole enemy platoons may exhaust it and take over. So the dose of an infectious agent is important. PCR does not inform about that, it only says here is a sign of a foreign soldier... a footprint in the street...
So PCR cannot say anything about infection per se. And therefore it cannot say anything about a possible transmission of an infection to other subjects.
In this study a PCR test was used to detect infection. (Methodology – Specimen Collection and Analysis; in basic English: we took a swab sample from participants — from the nose — twice a week and tested it using a PCR test).
1. A PCR (Polymerase Chain Reaction) test does not check for a virus, but only for a bit/bits of its genetic code (RNA/DNA). If you want to see a virus, you have to do a culture; you have to grow it on a cell culture. The only result of the PCR test is: I have found the bit I was looking for (with such and such certainty). Nothing else. One cannot infer anything based on this knowledge alone. It would be a parallel to: I have found a footprint in the street, maybe there was a crime committed, and I will solve it.
2. PCR is not a quantitative test; it only says if what I'm looking for is there or not, it does not say how much of it is there. Why is this important? Let’s say the immune system is like an army. One enemy soldier will be easily defeated, while whole enemy platoons may exhaust it and take over. So the dose of an infectious agent is important. PCR does not inform about that, it only says here is a sign of a foreign soldier... a footprint in the street...
So PCR cannot say anything about infection per se. And therefore it cannot say anything about a possible transmission of an infection to other subjects.
👍17
Eastern Approaches—Alex Thomson
Subscriber's response: In this study a PCR test was used to detect infection. (Methodology – Specimen Collection and Analysis; in basic English: we took a swab sample from participants — from the nose — twice a week and tested it using a PCR test). 1. A…
The same subscriber's even longer version for the hardcore:
Ok, if you still did not give up, let’s put the story straight.
The story always starts with a patient seeing a doctor. The doctor first talks and listens to the patient: takes the history of the presenting complaint(s). These complaints — what the patient reports — are called symptoms. These are thing like: I have a pain here, I have found this bump there, I feel rather tired, I cannot sleep well etc.
If a patient says, "I feel fluish", it is good practice to ask what exactly he or she means: what are the symptoms? (Fever, headache, muscle aches, runny nose, sore throat, shortness of breath, tiredness, lack of concentration, to mention but a few, so fluish is not a symptom, and is not clearly defined, can mean many things to many people.)
The conversation continues by focusing on personal medical history, or what medical problems or interventions there were in the past (if any), problems in the family etc.
Then the doctor performs a physical examination, looking for signs of disease by taking observations (respiratory rate, pulse, blood pressure, saturation of oxygen etc.) and performing the clinical examination (e.g. listens to the heart, lungs, palpitates the abdomen, tries to elicit reflexes, etc). *
To an experienced clinician, this usually suffices to arrive at a rather narrow differential diagnosis, i.e. what is going on with the patient.
ONLY AFTER that come requests for laboratory tests and imaging, if they can help in further clinical management and/or decisions about treatment(s). Now, PCR tests belong to this category. To start here is to stand the whole story on its head (recently this seems to be fashionable, but only leads to delusions). **
In the case of a suspected respiratory infection, the only important matter is to distinguish between a viral and bacterial source of infection (a proper history, examination and blood tests will do), since the latter may need an antibiotic treatment. In the case of the former, there is hardly ever a clinical need to differentiate which virus is responsible, since the treatment is the same, boosting patients’ immune system (rest, bed rest, vitamins, zinc, fluids, sleep, patience) and alleviation of the symptoms, if appropriate. There is no clinical need for a PCR test in such situation.
It never works the other way around.
* Here we can see that if a patient (or a nurse, for that matter) presents with a FINDING, e.g. "I have high blood pressure", we have to start from the beginning, as described above, to come to the picture of where the elevated blood pressure really fits or belongs (if, in fact, it really is elevated!). An elevated marker in a blood test without the knowledge of the patient’s clinical state is impossible to interpret.
If I am informed by a nurse, for example, that a patient’s potassium level is dangerously high (based on blood results), that the patient may die and needs urgent treatment, then if I act on that call alone, without examining the patient or double checking the result, I could possibly kill the patient by my negligence!
A similar story is that of a raised CRP (C-reactive protein), a marker of inflammation. A raised CRP, on its own account, does not warrant antibiotic treatment nor a hospital stay for the patient. It may well, but the story has to start from the beginning.
Dr Vit Kopecky
Prove me wrong. I am waiting.
A final note [by Dr Kopecky]:
I am not able to comment if viruses really exist or not, I have not done a deep enough dive into it. Even if they do not, all of the above holds true. Define the problem, and search for solutions. A “flu” is just a “flu”.
Ok, if you still did not give up, let’s put the story straight.
The story always starts with a patient seeing a doctor. The doctor first talks and listens to the patient: takes the history of the presenting complaint(s). These complaints — what the patient reports — are called symptoms. These are thing like: I have a pain here, I have found this bump there, I feel rather tired, I cannot sleep well etc.
If a patient says, "I feel fluish", it is good practice to ask what exactly he or she means: what are the symptoms? (Fever, headache, muscle aches, runny nose, sore throat, shortness of breath, tiredness, lack of concentration, to mention but a few, so fluish is not a symptom, and is not clearly defined, can mean many things to many people.)
The conversation continues by focusing on personal medical history, or what medical problems or interventions there were in the past (if any), problems in the family etc.
Then the doctor performs a physical examination, looking for signs of disease by taking observations (respiratory rate, pulse, blood pressure, saturation of oxygen etc.) and performing the clinical examination (e.g. listens to the heart, lungs, palpitates the abdomen, tries to elicit reflexes, etc). *
To an experienced clinician, this usually suffices to arrive at a rather narrow differential diagnosis, i.e. what is going on with the patient.
ONLY AFTER that come requests for laboratory tests and imaging, if they can help in further clinical management and/or decisions about treatment(s). Now, PCR tests belong to this category. To start here is to stand the whole story on its head (recently this seems to be fashionable, but only leads to delusions). **
In the case of a suspected respiratory infection, the only important matter is to distinguish between a viral and bacterial source of infection (a proper history, examination and blood tests will do), since the latter may need an antibiotic treatment. In the case of the former, there is hardly ever a clinical need to differentiate which virus is responsible, since the treatment is the same, boosting patients’ immune system (rest, bed rest, vitamins, zinc, fluids, sleep, patience) and alleviation of the symptoms, if appropriate. There is no clinical need for a PCR test in such situation.
It never works the other way around.
* Here we can see that if a patient (or a nurse, for that matter) presents with a FINDING, e.g. "I have high blood pressure", we have to start from the beginning, as described above, to come to the picture of where the elevated blood pressure really fits or belongs (if, in fact, it really is elevated!). An elevated marker in a blood test without the knowledge of the patient’s clinical state is impossible to interpret.
If I am informed by a nurse, for example, that a patient’s potassium level is dangerously high (based on blood results), that the patient may die and needs urgent treatment, then if I act on that call alone, without examining the patient or double checking the result, I could possibly kill the patient by my negligence!
A similar story is that of a raised CRP (C-reactive protein), a marker of inflammation. A raised CRP, on its own account, does not warrant antibiotic treatment nor a hospital stay for the patient. It may well, but the story has to start from the beginning.
Dr Vit Kopecky
Prove me wrong. I am waiting.
A final note [by Dr Kopecky]:
I am not able to comment if viruses really exist or not, I have not done a deep enough dive into it. Even if they do not, all of the above holds true. Define the problem, and search for solutions. A “flu” is just a “flu”.
👍16
Eastern Approaches—Alex Thomson
The same subscriber's even longer version for the hardcore: Ok, if you still did not give up, let’s put the story straight. The story always starts with a patient seeing a doctor. The doctor first talks and listens to the patient: takes the history of the…
The last note Dr Kopecky made in the above made the text too long for a Telegram post. Here it is on its own:
** On D-dimer: This is a by-product of the last of the series of reactions that have to take place in order for blood to clot. By measuring it, we can see if clot formation is taking place. Again, that is it! It does not say why, nor where. It only says yes or no. It is not a marker of a pathology per se, it does not diagnose a condition per se. If the result is POSITIVE (the measured number is raised), it does not diagnose a disease (deep vein thrombosis, lung embolism, Covid vaccine injury, etc.) per se!
More commonly, we use a NEGATIVE result to rule out all of the above: if there is no measure of clotting, then no DVT is possible. In the context of the vaccines, if the doctor cannot identify, by an examination, any reason for clotting — and in that group of patients, the test is often POSITIVE — it may imply that some “micro”-clotting is taking place: the doctor cannot see symptoms nor signs of it, yet it must be happening. And the problem is that a blood clot itself triggers the chain of blood-clotting reactions!
** On D-dimer: This is a by-product of the last of the series of reactions that have to take place in order for blood to clot. By measuring it, we can see if clot formation is taking place. Again, that is it! It does not say why, nor where. It only says yes or no. It is not a marker of a pathology per se, it does not diagnose a condition per se. If the result is POSITIVE (the measured number is raised), it does not diagnose a disease (deep vein thrombosis, lung embolism, Covid vaccine injury, etc.) per se!
More commonly, we use a NEGATIVE result to rule out all of the above: if there is no measure of clotting, then no DVT is possible. In the context of the vaccines, if the doctor cannot identify, by an examination, any reason for clotting — and in that group of patients, the test is often POSITIVE — it may imply that some “micro”-clotting is taking place: the doctor cannot see symptoms nor signs of it, yet it must be happening. And the problem is that a blood clot itself triggers the chain of blood-clotting reactions!
👍4
Audio
Nine-minute clip in German:
This is part of a Radio München interview with Dr. med. Gerd Reuther, specialist in radiology, best-selling author (Der betrogene Patient) and recipient of the Eugenie und Felix Wachsmann Prize of the Deutsche Röntgengesellschaft.
Dr Reuther was chief physician at clinics in Vienna, Wiesbaden and Saalfeld and is a renowned historian of medicine.
The interviewer is repeatedly perplexed.
This is part of a Radio München interview with Dr. med. Gerd Reuther, specialist in radiology, best-selling author (Der betrogene Patient) and recipient of the Eugenie und Felix Wachsmann Prize of the Deutsche Röntgengesellschaft.
Dr Reuther was chief physician at clinics in Vienna, Wiesbaden and Saalfeld and is a renowned historian of medicine.
The interviewer is repeatedly perplexed.