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Sunday 28 April 2019

This Is The Basic Problem:

Look you can't blame producer Barbara Broccoli too much. For one thing she is not British, she is American. And in the second place she originally contracted the screenwriters Neal Purvis and Robert Wade because she has seen an earlier work of theirs which she described as being 'dark, witty, sexy and inventive...' ...indeed all the things you would want in a Bond movie.

And then, she hired Martin Campbell the director to try and revive the franchise - which he managed to do especially in Casino Royale, which was a commercial success and really unearthed the English-speaking mainstream public to Eva Green who went onto substantial successes in more movies.
'I just know you guys are going to f* it up!'

But then - and for me you can see the signs already beginning to creep in in Casino Royale when someone is placing various policy pressures onto the director - the whole enterprise goes badly downhill in a very tragic way when the entire Bond 'canon,' let's say, the authentic book-based narrative about what this thing is all about, turns into some kind of political propaganda pantomime horse. 

And that is because there is a difference between 'writer,' and 'screenwriter.' The two things are not the same at all - and neither Purvis nor Wade are acknowledged writers with any real body of print work published beforehand.

A screenwriter is a visual logistics manager or documenting clerk. A writer deals with all kinds of ideas communicated in the first instance through words and language. And there are some ideas that have no visual image analogs to render the real sense of them. In films they require to be implied by scenes, images, and perhaps sound - and even then, they will rely on the audience having an ability to make the impressionistic leaps needed.

'Petrichor' has no direct visual analog. 'Aldehyde' hasn't either. Nor does 'louche;' at least not in the modern world.

Once you have the screenwriters also bringing their own personal private life biases into the stories which are not part of the real originator's 'canon,' you massively run the risk of losing the audience that made you rich in the first place who liked what was there when they were attracted to the product. 

Len Deighton and Leslie Charteris were significant writers long before they worked on Bond films as screenwriters, even though they were both good screenwriters, especially so Charteris. They understood what today's Bond developers appear to have no clue about, which is that the Fleming stories do not revolve around the following:

Weird Characters
Location
Politics
Crazy Objective (of inverted 'protagonist' character; namely, the villain)
Anti-Protagonist (Bond)
Conflict caused by Bond blocking the objective
Car-chase
Violence and pain
Dangerous edges
Explosions
Bigger Explosions
Huge vast explosions
Credits and music

...What they revolve around I do know - but it would cost you a damn lot of money to get it from me!

You're on your own coughing up twenty bucks plus coke and popcorn money for the rubbish you will get from Eon and the two gay guys inclusive one heroin addict. Good luck.




Music is - Arnej 'People Come People Go' (Maor Levi Remix)

Friday 26 April 2019

Scientist Goes Missing...??!

Like, yeah, so what?

Rami Malek is announced as coming onto the cast of the new Bond scam. And a comedy writer(!) is also announced as THE MAIN SCREENPLAY WRITER(?)

Okay so what has been going on with the Bond franchise for years now is that they hold off on production until they get what they reckon are adequate placement and support contracts before they make the next movie or even commission a script and screenplay. Variety Magazine reported the producers have secured a hundred million dollars from a list of brands like Belvedere vodka, Heineken, Gillette, Omega watches...

So now you know (ought to be able to guess) how the French actress from the Schlumberger family got her part.

Yep. Sony was kicked off the distribution account and substituted with Universal Pictures, who clearly take a far lesser cut now.

The next Bond, whilst it will sink like a stone at the Box Office, will still be a 'success' for the producers, who don't give a f* about talent or being a faithful custodian of the true Bond 'brand,' or thrilling or entertaining the audience or paying real screenwriters or meaningful writers generally.

It seems that the mode for all the big movie franchises now - because people don't spend money going to movie theaters anymore and are getting everything they want from the internet - is product-placement and other angles to make money other than real ticket sales. Marvel creates one disaster after another and still goes on. 

Apparently the main plot line of 'Bond 25' is that a scientist goes missing where Bond is vacationing or maybe more or less in retirement.
Yawn...

And with Malek turning up the continuing undercurrent will be that everything about Bond will be gay-themed and there is not a damned thing real fans of the real books and original films will be able to do about it. 

Scientist missing - no doubt a 'climate change expert' or even better still, could be a vaccination biochemist...

...And Rami Malek. Doing bad impressions of Montserrat Caballé. Why not.

Wonder how much Malek had to tip in to 'get' a spot. He's just come off a 'great success' from er, er, er, global marketing contracts. 

Thursday 25 April 2019

Precious Metals Lack A 'Narrative' Today

I received a communication very recently discussing the prospects for silver.

Categorically it is not possible to view price stability exhibited in both gold and silver markets as absent of interference by 'the Russians...' It must be 'the Russians,' after all - it can't be a concerted effort by the global network of Clearstream-enabled Central Banks. Because then that would be criminal fraud and conspiracy to cheat traders and investors and others.

But regardless of whoever is doing it, it is difficult to see near-term price rises without some obvious change in this scam of limitless forward selling using printed fiat and then 'buying in' on the shaken out 'longs' and even commercial vault holders of physical.

Yet, against the background of this seeming absolute 'control' of the market, is the existence of an unacknowledged crack in the fabric of all bankers' 'space-time continuum.' Clearstream, the public-company owned iteration of what was originally the vital Swiss Settling and Custody Aktiengesetz that all Central Banks previously depended on for the SWIFT system, has had a declining uptake against competing platforms such as the basic internet Blockchain system. What this really means is that something has gone wrong with the 'elite.' They control nothing now. Theoretically, maybe, they could control some aspects of governments' policies to do with the internet, but they literally cannot control the actual internet itself because it is independent - with modern wireless systems - of network infrastructure run by government, or even 'seen' by governments.

We might have to face some situation at some point around the next corner, in which banks and traditional currencies develop insurmountable problems concerning being universally accepted tokens of exchange. I mean it seems silly, but what if dirty Russian 'money' starts transferring London real estate using BitCoin... It's not going to see the City of London prevent them from doing this, because money laundering using false valuations, is how London functions economically at all, and as long as they (the London Freemasonry 'masters') get their 'cut' they're not going to object especially not if it means not getting any 'cut' at all if they do object. If money is 'dirty' because it is from dubious Russian sources, BitCoin is far easier to 'acquire' without the taint if you happen to be a Russian oligarch with access to a Moscow semi-government financial account ledger.

Yeah. We've got a problem all right. And the media doesn't want to talk about it and governments are certainly not going to admit it. Literally, it's already the case that banks are an irrelevancy. Sure they still pay political lobbies, but to do what? They can attain no further control (from where they once were at the zenith) and have actually already lost control of the monetary tiger.
Very nice 'Damascene' silverware

Gold and silver have not changed their roles as a monetary 'backstop.' We can definitely look at slowly averaging a meaningful physical position.

But in terms of wider public demand, the public always needs a media-led 'narrative.' Gold Rush Fever! Spanish Silver! Pirates' Treasure!

Even the Chinese, who once were the leading exponents of silver casting, never talk about gold or silver in the terms they once did. Nor do the Japanese, and nor does anyone else for that matter.

There are some amazing arts that were historically associated with silver mining and silver stores - Damscening, the art of inlaying different metals, usually against silver or gold, produced stunning works in antiquity. Same with Toledo silver worked sword hilts.
A 'dirham' is an Arabic silver coin, as you well know

Sterling silver tea services are still bought at auctions but not given any kind of significant notation in the present-day media.There is a whole specific Russian silver style of craft that used to command huge prices - probably still does, but it is conducted outside of the media's glare.

There is no narrative going on in the general media and the public has lost interest in silver and gold.

And what does that mean?



    

Sunday 21 April 2019

Why Mueller's Material Omissions Are Significant

Basically, we are at a point where there are some things that no sensible, rational person, without a 'get-out' plan literally made by the head of a seriously powerful network, would say publicly.

And this is still, despite the extensive 'shadow-blocking' that has been going on this month, a public place; this blogspot is open to the public. And that means miscreants definitely can get to here and absorb stuff.

Nonetheless though, we will put out a few things in our own inimitable reckless way...

Joseph Mifsud is a formally-paid officer of the UK Secret Intelligence Services. But more than that, under the 'Five Eyes Co-operative Agreement,' he is a registered listed operative of the US Intelligence panoply.

Mifsud approached George Papadopoulos claiming to have thousands of intercepted Hillary Clinton emails that were extremely damaging.

At roughly the same time, a 'Henry Greenberg' approached Michael Caputo claiming to have 'damaging information about Hillary Clinton' (that he wanted $2 million for).

Some other 'Russian' businessman at the same time approached Roger Stone with more or less exactly the same offer. LOL

Robert Mueller made several very considerable material omissions in his report, one of them specifically being, that 'Henry Greenberg' was an FBI paid informant for 17 years.
Not just any old weapon... This is a 'message weapon,'
same as this was a 'message pic.' LOL This is hurting me.

In Australia, Pablo Miller, the handler of Sergei Skripal, was working inside the James Packer organisation to develop a very close line of access to the top tiers of Australian politics. 'Miller' is, I believe, currently residing in New Zealand along with Joseph Mifsud in a highly secured 'upscale' private farmlet property. They thought they were going to develop first grade access to the new Cuba, and have found likely to their extreme chagrin, that the Trump Administration has decided the WHACK HUGE sanctions on ANY EUROPEANS TRYING TO DO BUSINESS IN CUBA.

Miller is an absolutely deadly guy, with access to hugely toxic and internationally outlawed chemicals.

He is also an officer of the new Computing Center set up by UK spy chief Sir Alex Alan; he has extensive knowledge of gun-mounted wi-fi video camera equipment and real-time streaming.
Sure you got the same person, guys...
Believe me, this is all starting to be so funny it is literally hurting me.

Earlier this last week, the Trump Administration complimented General Haftar in Libya, on his rocking military campaign against Macron's er, oh sorry, against 'terrorists' operating in Libya.

You know if I said such a thing as a certain person is 'lucky to be alive' in context of this column, it might be viewed as a threat. So I will refrain from saying such things!

Yet you can see that a certain desperation is starting to creep into the dark minds of the insane people who tried this stunt about 'Russia something or other.' I mean, just look against what such schemes were averted: today you can see a huge expensive 'protest' is being stage-managed by the entire London Metropolitan Police and a thousand University students and PhD writers. Millions of pounds of government money is being spent in what is essentially, blatant in-your-face and rude propaganda - the work of charlatans.
Way, way over the top of your heads, guys.

Given that they are so powerful, you can imagine the irritation over how on Earth it was ever possible for Donald Trump to have been voted in... And how on Earth all their plans and schemes are being overturned, one by one.

Were, so powerful. But, as you know, when rats are cornered you get to really see the nastiness, of rats.

It's probably the time to do a 'reveal' - there are Russians, there certainly were Russians, doing things, as well as Americans working hand-in-hand with Russians... Robert De Niro, you might even like to hear this.

There were Russians. Though not the Russians you all went after.

You can't understand the game, Robert. And the rest of you on the wrong side here.

 
Sniper rifle with live wi-fi upstreaming video capability,
and a whole range of other electronics.


  


Saturday 20 April 2019

First, Clear Water...



'Oshibori' is the name given by the Japanese to the art and culture of hot towels and hot towel massage.

The practice is certainly known in other cultures too, of course.



All your senses, while put into a kind of temporary relaxed state, should still be working and available at a subtle level...


Friday 19 April 2019

Six Stone Jars

I read earlier this week, someone's response to the Paris Cathedral fire, that 'Catholicism was an abomination to god...' And that was on the basis, the gentleman said, of around half a dozen points, one of which I clearly recall that he said: 'Catholics pray to Mary, who is dead and the bible says one must not pray to the dead.'

Personally I find these kinds of very widespread arguments quite funny from a distance, but then again quite boring if you have to get too closely involved in any such discussion.

I can think of two issues with making the sort of pronouncement that was made regarding the bible - one is that virtually no one these days has read the bible in the languages it was originally written in, almost no one at all has a Universally-accepted framework of translation (actual word meanings, phraseology, grammar what of it existed at the time...), and two, even if people have read the bible these days they seem not to possess any kind of memory that serves them accurately.

I don't know anywhere in the bible where it says that Mary the mother of Jesus Christ is dead...


Why didn't Macron burn down a great restaurant?
Not only that, as for consulting the dead, the Witch of Endor is only famous on account of accurately making predictions (in the bible) for King Saul after having summoned and speaking with the spirit of the dead prophet Samuel, admittedly though Jesus is meant to have said neither were any of the prophets 'dead' either but living somewhere not on the Earth.

Sometimes in all of the diatribe and gibberish that gets uttered regarding the bible (well, or just about any religious text at all, really; it's not restricted to the bible) rather pointed ideas go missing in the egocentricity of people's fired-up self-importance over their 'pronouncements.'

I often taunt certain people about the water-into-wine story - not just Christian religious people, but wine aficionados too: firstly what actual wine was made, and secondly, does anyone know how much was made in the incident...?

The story is that it was 'the best wine' and that there were six stone jars able to carry between twenty and thirty gallons of water.

...And so we are talking about more or less a 1,000 bottles of wine here.

That's no small 'miracle.'




Right now just for a while I'm staying away from talking about Pablo Miller (real name Tony D'Dalgo), or 'Darktrace' and why the cross-flow of ex-NSA employees with UK internet security companies is deadly dangerous.

LOL

Or that Macron is not just a drug addict, but that the French Secret Service is having some difficulty keeping him 'together' for the cameras. Most European politicians in cabinet roles - and that includes a lot of UK politicians, are using standard 'Beta Blockers' to mediate their body language over-activity (so do numerous film actors and actresses on account of the fact that the film camera amplifies the slightest movements), but some go over the top and try and express 'empathy' with people by using specialist drugs when they are in fact lying; the secondary problem being that such chemicals are highly addictive and some have adverse physiological and neurological side-effects.

The question for you is, is money more like water, than it is like wine? You know, flowing cheaply and plentiful - or like a marketing scam at $30,000 a small bottle of... That's the important question. Not whether or not politicians are crooks. We know that answer already. There's no surprising miracle entailed down that path. 

Thursday 18 April 2019

Speaking Of Old Things...

Off the top of my head (an unfortunate metaphor, perhaps, in context of anything even vaguely connected to Paris...) the world's most expensive wine is the Royal Tokaji 2008 vintage. At $40,000 a 1.5 liter bottle.

Once again we have Louis XIV 'the Sun King' implicated in another wine legend, since he did in fact call the Hungarian Tokaji 'the wine of kings and the king of wines.'

I have had different editions of Royal Tokaji, not the new highest-priced one, and the brand and name never went for such elevated prices (at least not in relatively recent times) prior to a decided effort by the winemakers to deliberately re-establish the wine at the very top of the world's clearly and widely esteemed styles and names.

I mean they are entitled to position the wine there - it is certainly good enough.

But there are a number of 'oldest, best-est,' and 'most expensive-est' wines, especially when it comes to the matter of Napoleon cognac.

We have spoken of the Remy Martin Louis XIII not long ago, and this contains an amount of 100-year old authentic Napoleon liquors in the total blend. We are talking $35,000 a bottle there. And there are those auction house show-stoppers that claim the Guinness Record now and then for 'the most expensive' or 'the oldest' bottle ever, or ever found...

You have to be careful though and not equate apples with oranges because sometimes the old bottles are close to a gallon in size/quantity of liquor!! When cut back to the same volumes, per volume, it is the Royal Tokaji that is the most expensive.
Cuvee Leonie Cognac - oldest, most expensive individual bottles...

I can tell you about another brand of though - Seppeltsfield in Australia. This is consistently rated 100/100 by a large number of world-famous wine experts.

You can easily buy a Seppeltsfield 100-year old Para Port wine any day, for about $150 for around 700 ml., and around $35 for a 'Grand Tawny' Seppeltsfield and maybe $500 for the
major 'Vintage Tawny.'

Now, it's worth remembering that these Port wines - virtually all Port wines as far as I know - contain brandy or cognac in them that stops the continuing fermentation of the grape juice, thereby preserving the freshness and some of the acidity.

So... ...if you buy a Seppeltsfield 100-year old Port, it will contain 100-year old brandy or cognac in it.

What's the difference in taste and taste experience? The Seppeltfield Tawny is much more tart than you would suppose, given it is a Port wine - which is meant to be very sweet. It is of course, sweet but it is also complex with all kinds of other flavors that come through.

The 100-year old Vintage is even more complex with slightly less of a tart profile. 

With either of them, you get a real sense of antiquity and yet also esoteric and complex beauty. They are highly pleasurable experiences, either wine.

And I am sure so is the Royal Tokaji. I wouldn't turn one away from the door.



LOL ...Not saying anything!

Monday 15 April 2019

Chef, We Burnt The Steak

Was posted on Sunday, 17 March:


Actually I hesitated to even approach what I need to talk about, because it was with a heavy heart and much misgiving that I was about to talk about certain things claimed to be 'in short supply' but which really are not. You see, if I talk about them, there is a chance that picture will change about their pricing and so on, and I'll readily admit I have an interest in exploiting lies people tell, if I happen to know they are lies.
Chef - we burnt the steak!

I don't really go around with this sense of moral duty to 'loudly proclaim the truth in the market square...' LOL

Now d'you see what I mean? I don't wish to save the people from anything. Not all of them, anyway. But I do wish to preserve the great ideas and technologies and texts and things like that, in case of flood. Although they do say 'the fire next time.'

Are we here yet?

We're here.


Sunday, 17 March 2019


Keep The Stack Of Books Tight Under Your Arm

The highest point of humanity, the peak chapter of the cycles of the human race, is this precise moment, when some person, young or old, man or woman, runs across a town square (such as it may be, for instance, in ancient Tyre or Sidon, or Alexandria when it was burning to the ground - which happened several times of course) with a small pile of books or texts under their arm, their cloak flailing in the breeze and tumult swirling around them.

If it were not for some of these incidents, I assure you we would not know Euclid as we do today, nor Al Kindi, nor several other incalculably valuable masters, that is to say, their written works.

Macron told journalists that he would govern like the Roman god Jupiter, and then he told the same journalists that they would not have the intellect to understand the complexity of what he was saying. Macron is of course Nero, and not Jupiter - the Roman poet Titus Calpurnius Siculus having likened Nero to Jupiter... Nero, as you know from the folklore (because nowadays the history books try to deny it as having been a fact in the first place) being the criminal dictator who burned down buildings when the owners resisted paying him protection money, and then claiming the glory of 'saving' the buildings from the worst of the fire when he 'sent' brigades to put out the fires (that he himself lit or caused to be lit). 

A Predictive Approach

This is the start of the Autumn Opera Season in Europe. Yes there is opera almost everywhere, but I am picking out Europe at the moment because that is where modern narrative dramatic singing we call 'opera' began after all. And for this post I wanted to look at something to do with large structural architecture associated with opera.

Now there are many things one might conclude about examining modern design as compared to design approaches of the past but I want to focus on the impact of computer-generated hypothetical visuals. In this mode, the human design decision-maker or design manager, matched what they saw with some internal aesthetic template, and then says 'yes' to one visual image in a vast series of them; 'we'll adopt that one...'
Inside the very modern Bastille Opera in Paris

In the past, the human designer internally considered an imagined concept against a different set of templates, which were not all visual alone, but consisted of idea frameworks and intangible base principles, not just iterations of pictures be they multi-dimensional or simple two-dimensional drawings.

What I would suggest is that the way in which humans think becomes characteristically different depending on such differences of approach - and that also includes the ability, or inability, to think using words alongside or instead of graphical images.

I could suggest that one reason that the upcoming schedule of appearances by the Russian-Ukrainian Anna Netrebko at the new 'Bastille Opera Building' rather than say the older Garnier Opera Theater, is to do with security issues.

The Bastille Opera was designed by the Uruguayan architect Carlos Ott.

And he is right at the top of modern architecture and designs very beautiful buildings. Without putting any pejoratives on it, the fact remains that modern architecture lacks the small detail and tiny intricate, perhaps ornate, design elements that old styles possessed - although one has to add that with the great modern exponents, you are looking at some considerable intellectual interplay of ellipsoids and regular polygons and clear, clean-faced surface geometry which seems to be a characteristic of this era's leading buildings.
New Ferrari Sp 38 -
an obviously computer assisted design.

My contention though remains that the approach endangers human thinking processes and limits them in what they are able to think and to predict - and the reason building architecture is possibly less fragile to the problems of computer-generated iterative approaches is that buildings are not moving in the way that cars, planes, pens, and similar kinetic mechanisms are. Yes, gravity, mass and void space also are considered in terms of 'dynamics' and conceptual motion, but the eventual product is a static thing like a statue, rather than a mechanism that creates friction due to actual motion. Buildings allow for a different pace of thought inside the mind of the architect and designer.

I say that modern people cannot predict their near-term future.

I say that they have missed the bleeding obvious and by a long way.
What happens in the future...?

Take the example of China - here we have an ego-driven dictator (quickly passed a law installing himself for life), running with the economic momentum of people who established the direction well before him, and whose mind he does not understand at all. It's entirely possible that with the death of Lin Biao in 1971, and the death not long afterwards (1976) of Zhou Enlai, that China has been in the hidden grip of a power-mad elite that bubbled along beneath the optimistic surface presented by people like Deng Xiaoping. ...Because the factual reality of Beijing politics is that all we have seen has been nothing but internal purges and fighting among themselves at the top, and a system that drove away clearly competent academics like Zhu Rongji from the top positions.

Today we have state-run propaganda and an obvious 'cult of Xi' afoot in China.

The end game to this story is crystal clear. It's a story that we are thoroughly sick of, having witnessed all of human history up until this moment - but, like any bad gambler, Xi no doubt thinks, 'but it will not happen to me.' We are beset by these types of characters walking the political stage, in such a way as they never have before; in the past, such people were more circumspect - Macron actually publicly equated himself to the Roman 'Jupiter.' 

I haven't heard Xi do similarly but then, I don't get as wide a range of reports from China, as I do from Europe. There is an ancient saying whose origin nobody knows - it is this: 'the god brooks none but himself to (show) overweening pride.'

Saturday 13 April 2019

Jay-Z Crowds Out The 'Luxury' Market

There has been a massive pull-back in the expenditure the big connected boards are making in the 'luxury market' scene - we saw how a few months ago Rolex drastically cut back their annual output of watches down to an anemic 600,000 pieces, and this has been followed up across the whole luxury brand vista, with advertisers pulling out of sponsoring big events, pulling out their money from television networks with respect to the annual commercial time 'buys.'
DJ Khaled backs D'usse Cognac, a 'Jay-Z' brand
...Happens to be a very good cognac, by the way.

There is a roaring whisper about the Shanghai/Beijing luxury market as well, which bodes ill for everyone in the rest of the world.

There will be a few excuses made to do with the uncertainty of 'Brexit' but the message we need to take is about underlying problems with a lack of purchasing interest by the so-called affluent consumer class.

It has long been an aphorism among chief executives who operate in the luxury market space that the consumer spend is tied closely to the Wall Street Index on general equities.

And so, on the surface of things you would not expect senior executives and the luxury manufacturing leaders to be making the kinds of investing decisions that they currently are making.
D'usse Cognac - pronounced 'dusay...'

What do they know or suspect that the rest of us do not know about or 'feel...?'

Nothing. They have no clue.

Period. And bank it.

For one thing, the subject they really have no clue about is actual 'luxury.'

Keiser Karl just passed away and he was pretty much the end of it all as far as genuine, authentic quality in design elements for the Western fashion world. David Tang passed not too long ago as well, so that was it for the old 'Empire Far East.' Lagerfeld's mother came from the old Paris 'Salon' world and the genuine wealthy Bohemian displaced aristocracy. Tang was sufficiently borderline close to the real China 'Tang' family of ancient times and ancient wealth and class...

I mean I appreciate that 'Bacardi' (a HUGE, global house) is still a family-owned business, but it is industrialized and megalithic - it makes play into the upper class's luxury consumable world, but to do so it has to go to small French estates and re-brand what those small houses have been making for decades and still make under their own names, and sell for vastly less.

So is it really true that because Jay-Z backs something all of a sudden that 600,000 'strong' list of rich people all goes and buys the 'up-branded' product at ten times the usual price?

God those rich people must be stupid. That's why they're rich; because they are stupid.

Huh?!!

This is an actual rum distillery, and only a tiny part
of the whole industrial plant and facility, which covers 100's of acres.

Friday 12 April 2019

The Greatest Ever

As a lot of the readers here will know - the racehorse Winx just ran her final professional public course race in the 2019 Queen Elizabeth Stakes at Randwick Racecourse in Sydney, Australia.

Winx is the greatest Champion racehorse I'll see in my lifetime. She retired undefeated, having won 33 races in a row, 25 of them at 'Group 1' level which is a world record.

Winx is by Street Cry from Vegas Showgirl.


I might note, just for personal reasons - and my wife and close friends can attest - that I backed her at her very first start, which she won by ten lengths going away from a good field.

There will be controversy from the overseas pundits and sports writers but the reality is there was never a better horse and there never will be, certainly not in our lifetimes. And as I always underline, European owners and trainers do not genuinely care about their animals as far as I'm concerned, taking exorbitant risks with them often, and always with those people, it's just about the money.

Australians love their animals and racehorse people (by far the majority of them) love their horses and look after them superbly.

The trainer of Winx Christ Waller broke down and was visibly in tears after the race, probably from relief as much as anything else; it's an incredibly stressful position that he has been in, with expectations far beyond the ordinarily 'high' and many people on the outside of course, just snarling and gnashing, who always wish to see tragedy happen to anything successful. Never did happen in this instance, however, and the horse has entered the history books forever.


Wednesday 10 April 2019

Okay, So They Lied...

You must have seen all those YouTube videos by now - 'History is One Big Lie;' 'They've Lied To You;' and so on.
Dekobra was a French diplomat who wrote some of the most
seminal modern
thriller and romantic drama novels of all time,
and which have been widely plagiarized by Hollywood in their movies.

Yeah so 'they' lied to us - Hitler 100% never started WWII, Churchill conspired to provoke America's entry into that war, the pyramids are more or less 12,000 years old not 4,500+/- and they are nobody's 'tombs,' the American Indians were already doing as much slaughtering and virtual 'genociding' of what each tribe construed another 'racially-inferior' American Indian tribe to be, and probably more so in fact, as then did the 'invading' Europeans afterwards...! ...And, modern 'elected' governments never work for the people who elected them, or apparently elected them..
Dekobra is widley translated, and is a popular novelist in Arabic

You can't do anything about it to stop it - 'they' are too numerous and have greater fundamental mass power.

Like Jesus and Imam Hussain you 'could' throw yourself into the gaping mouth of the hungry tiger, I suppose...

LOL

You don't know, you know, American Indians are heavily involved in Freemasonry as well. Why do you think they have 'lodges?'

Now.

Now...

No-o-w...

There's this little door, see, just in the garden fence down there at the end behind the big tree. It's very small; you won't be able to fit in through it to escape.
...And in Persian (this book is 'Lost Love').

Here's a pic from out of an old movie that is now owned by Microsoft in conjunction with Disney, who brought it out originally in 1961. In the movie this clever but scatter-brained toy-maker makes a strange 'ray' gun, which can either make you toy-sized (small), or normal-sized (as you were).

If you had that gun you could fit through the door.








  

Monday 8 April 2019

'Entourages of the Oligarchs'

One of my Russian friends tells me that one of the pet hates of ordinary Russian people today, is the facile wealth accumulated by what are termed 'the entourages of the Oligarchs.'

It is not exactly true that all of the general public at large in Russia appreciates whole-heartedly, the positive balance-sheet economic and effective political, directions taken by VV post the drunkard puppet of the West, Yeltsin.
Can you guess? You can't guess... And what's his significance?

By 'Oligarchs' it is meant by the common Russian public, those who benefited enormously in the 'privatization' process of previously state concerns - in their minds they do tend to still believe that the state would be the better managers or the more responsible and honorable towards the ordinary citizenry. 

Frankly, my friends, the most 'Soviet' of groups in Russia are those among the less privileged classes, and Putin and his circle are virtually not 'Soviet' at all. But does this mean Putin and his administration are, um, totalitarian?

This is a highly contested question, of course.

I cannot answer it satisfactorily to every mind here. I have some insight about it but not that any Western government would care to attend to - they, after all, have better sources and resources than do I. Such, as you will recall, was also the case when 1. The FBI and even parts of the CIA and all of the media opined very strongly that Obama and Clinton were not beholden to the Muslim Brotherhood as represented by those academics and thinkers in London like Jamal Khashoggi and his cousin (or uncle by different accounts) the multi-billionaire Adnan Khashoggi. No doubt the two hundred million sent to Hillary via the Moroccan ruling elites had no connection with the sudden introduction of Imran Arwan, the Pakistani Secret Service operative who had immediate open access to all of the US Secretary of State's communications from that point onwards; 2. The FBI was firmly of the view that 'Russians were colluding with Trump' or something like that, when I openly declared here and elsewhere that it was an element of Londonistan's MI6 that was manufacturing the false narrative all along. In fact I even showed where the 'peeing story' actually came from and that it was a CIA plan to uncover who was illegally intercepting secret coms...
This is also the Pushkin Cafe, but this is the Paris Pushkin Cafe

And as you know, I have long held that 3. Mueller would 'fall into a hole in the road.' 

I even specified that Alexander Downer was a con-artist working for MI6 and fraudulently claiming some loose talk had occurred with George Papadopoulos.

Long long LONG before anyone else you know said any of these things, I said them.

So yeah, everybody else has better sources and resources than I have. Every day, all the time, I'm sure you've noticed just by watching Fox and CNN.

'London City' as you all know, is a separate sovereign place of its own, with no legal obligations to the rest of the UK nor yet the Queen! And so if you subvert London City and the people at the top there - you effectively have control of the UK and much of Europe as well, not to mention those satellite vassals like Singapore and New Zealand.

Now I promised you that I would say something about actual Russian clandestine operations, AFTER the Mueller nonsense had wrapped up - and I shall.

But mostly, people will fail to understand what is being said.

Nevertheless, let's consider some facts:

If you want 'the best dessert in the world' among the nose-bleed level highest upper aristocracies, you go to the Pushkin Cafe in Moscow and ask for their dessert...

It is the best in the world.

Pushkin is famous for many things, he was a young short-story writer who died in a duel at 37 with a proto-Nazi, and he wrote a short story with supernatural elements in it about someone who learned the secret of gambling from 'the Queen of Spades ' ('Pikovaya Dama' means 'Queen of Spades') and this later became an opera by Tchaikovsky.

The secret imparted by this mysterious lady consisted of the numbers 3, 7, and 1.
Russian Pushkin cafe creme brulee

Now, because the education of the Western person is absolutely pathetic these last several decades or more, few or none, will have the slightest clue about anything that I just said.

So what's the point?

Of course Russians fucked up the election for the Democrats - as they did for several of the fronts of London City pretending to be Republicans and who really, have no clue the types pulling their strings. 

I could lay the whole thing out chapter and verse before even Jerrold Nadler - who would just stare and say, 'I don't get it.'

LOL

Got it?

That's how these things are done. And gotten away with too.

...Now. On to the next exciting adventures.

Oh, by the way - there are two billion Muslims on the planet or thereabouts. How many know that Aleksandr Pushkin, the great Russian novelist and short story writer, was part Arabic and his grandfather was a Muslim?

Keep it quiet though, eh. We only have enough oil for our own lamps and things are about to get very dark indeed soon.