How many of you know about The Hope Prophecy, in which Sir William Hope (deputy governor of Edinbugh castle) accurately predicted the birth, major political events & tenure, and age at death of:
-George Washington
-Abraham Lincoln
-William McKinley
-Benjamin Harrison
All on the day that George Washington had been born, long before there were any thoughts of American independence?
Or that there was a mysterious Cambridge professor, unnamed in all accounts of the events, who was given great stature by Ben Franklin & George Washington who outlined that the US flag should include space for far more stars than the colonies seeking independence in 1776?
There are some who believe that the USA was ordained from the outset to be a great land, as far back as the Greeks (who by some accounts were here long before Columbus).
And that Columbus himself was a highly educated Greek prince rather than what we were told as school children.
How much of our history is virtually unknown to Americans?
How many past events fade away from historical knowledge because it doesn't jive with another theory or preferable narrative?
-George Washington
-Abraham Lincoln
-William McKinley
-Benjamin Harrison
All on the day that George Washington had been born, long before there were any thoughts of American independence?
Or that there was a mysterious Cambridge professor, unnamed in all accounts of the events, who was given great stature by Ben Franklin & George Washington who outlined that the US flag should include space for far more stars than the colonies seeking independence in 1776?
There are some who believe that the USA was ordained from the outset to be a great land, as far back as the Greeks (who by some accounts were here long before Columbus).
And that Columbus himself was a highly educated Greek prince rather than what we were told as school children.
How much of our history is virtually unknown to Americans?
How many past events fade away from historical knowledge because it doesn't jive with another theory or preferable narrative?
Have you ever heard the theory that each generation of parents acts in the opposite manner for childbearing than their own parents?
This is an interesting way to view the Rogan/RFK Jr vs Hotez "debate me bro" kerfuffle, as well as the problems the (many) octogenarians in DC are currently having with their (corrupt) "business as usual" approach.
I'll explain.
I was born on the generational cusp of GenX and Millenials, raised by baby Boomers who were about as good of parents as one could ever ask for - despite my being an extremely troublesome teen.
The parenting model of that generation was "because I said so!" and it worked.
Parents demanded respect, but the good ones also knew that they had to do their own job as parents to earn that respect.
The current generation of parents tend to follow more of an explanatory route, in direct contravention to the "because I said so" style.
This also works. Kids today have more access to information than ever in history, so it's good to elucidate and teach them in accordance with the avalanch of info at their disposal.
But the entire concept of The Fourth Turning is the "clashing of age group archetypes," where the models of & used by different generations clash.
The octogenarians in office and running major aspects of the GOV (which scientists funded by GOV like Hotez certainly are, and many would argue the current MSM is as well) live under the "because I said so!" mentality.
But that doesn't cut the mustard with:
-the older population cohort who knows they've been lied to, often
-the younger cohort raised on the "explain it to them" methodology
The Machine has found itself pressed between two greatly different forces that both want answers, and each will continue to press.
"Because I said so!" will not appease either.
This is an interesting way to view the Rogan/RFK Jr vs Hotez "debate me bro" kerfuffle, as well as the problems the (many) octogenarians in DC are currently having with their (corrupt) "business as usual" approach.
I'll explain.
I was born on the generational cusp of GenX and Millenials, raised by baby Boomers who were about as good of parents as one could ever ask for - despite my being an extremely troublesome teen.
The parenting model of that generation was "because I said so!" and it worked.
Parents demanded respect, but the good ones also knew that they had to do their own job as parents to earn that respect.
The current generation of parents tend to follow more of an explanatory route, in direct contravention to the "because I said so" style.
This also works. Kids today have more access to information than ever in history, so it's good to elucidate and teach them in accordance with the avalanch of info at their disposal.
But the entire concept of The Fourth Turning is the "clashing of age group archetypes," where the models of & used by different generations clash.
The octogenarians in office and running major aspects of the GOV (which scientists funded by GOV like Hotez certainly are, and many would argue the current MSM is as well) live under the "because I said so!" mentality.
But that doesn't cut the mustard with:
-the older population cohort who knows they've been lied to, often
-the younger cohort raised on the "explain it to them" methodology
The Machine has found itself pressed between two greatly different forces that both want answers, and each will continue to press.
"Because I said so!" will not appease either.
It's been the same scheme since inception, run by the same scammers (thread):
https://twitter.com/SomeB1tchIKnow/status/1670887267471093786?t=DQiMnXVDTITFLvJR05DurQ&s=19
https://twitter.com/SomeB1tchIKnow/status/1670887267471093786?t=DQiMnXVDTITFLvJR05DurQ&s=19
Twitter
A Brief History of Federal Income Tax in the US.
"The rich should pay their fair share!" has been the rallying cry for longer than you may have realized.
Congress instituted the first federal income tax in 1861, to fund the "Civil War." It was known as…
"The rich should pay their fair share!" has been the rallying cry for longer than you may have realized.
Congress instituted the first federal income tax in 1861, to fund the "Civil War." It was known as…
Forwarded from The Library (Harold Finch)
This is the kind of example that perfectly shows why people aren’t watching Fox ‘News’ anymore, & why Bret Baier in *particular* is about as popular as Genital Herpes.