Category Archives: Blog

Inside Le Monocle, the Parisian Lesbian Nightclub of the 1930s

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Violette Morris, a French female athlete and frequent patron of Le Monocle, became an early recruit of the Nazi gestapo to spy on her own country. While her friends, community and countrymen were being oppressed, arrested and sent to their deaths, Violette benefitted from the German occupation, living peacefully in a houseboat on the River Seine, courtesy of Adolf Hitler himself, who had personally invited the champion weightlifter to the Berlin Olympics in 1936.  She gave Germany partial plans of the Maginot Line, detailed plans of strategic points within the city of Paris, and schematics of the French army’s main tank. Her plans were integral to the German invasion of Paris in 1940.

Source: Inside Le Monocle, the Parisian Lesbian Nightclub of the 1930s

Category: Blog, Cities, People, Words | Tags: , ,

Preston James and Mike Harris, Hidden History of the Incredibly Evil Khazarian Mafia – James Fetzer

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Note: The history of the Khazarians, specifically the Khazarian Mafia (KM), the World’s largest Organized Crime Syndicate that the Khazarian oligarchy morphed into by their deployment of Babylonian Money-Magick, has been nearly completely excised from the history books.The present day KM knows that it cannot operate or exist without abject secrecy, and therefore has spent a lot of money having its history excised from the history books in order to prevent citizens of the World from learning about its “Evil beyond imagination”, that empowers this World’s largest Organized Crime Cabal.The authors of this article have done their best to resurrect this lost, secret history of the Khazarians and their large International Organized Crime Syndicate, best referred to as the Khazarian Mafia (KM) and make this history available to the World via the Internet, which is the new Gutenberg Press.

Source: Preston James and Mike Harris, Hidden History of the Incredibly Evil Khazarian Mafia – James Fetzer

Category: Blog, History, People, Politics, Words | Tags: , ,

James Joyce’s Chance Encounters | The New Yorker

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“Finnegans Wake” is not a prose poem, which is probably how many people would like to read it. It’s a work of realist fiction. It’s just that the reality it represents is nighttime reality, the dream life, which Joyce believed required the invention of a new mode of language. Normal syntax is designed for a law-abiding reality, for a reality that is organized temporally, spatially, and causally. In dreams, these laws are suspended, which means that, to represent the dream life, normal syntax has to be suspended, too. And images in dreams can represent two things at once, as when we dream of X and know all the time that it is Y. This is why punning is the language of the night.

Source: James Joyce’s Chance Encounters | The New Yorker

The Cyrus Cylinder And The Ancient Proclamation of Human Rights

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An old cylinder discovered in a temple in Babylon (modern-day Iraq) sporting cuneiform inscriptions revealed some surprising edicts. Linked with the Persian king, Cyrus the Great, founder of the Achaemenid Empire, many believe the Cylinder lays out the world’s first declaration of universal human rights. More than two millennia before the French Revolution introduced the Declaration of the Rights of Man. Of the Citizens, an ancient Near Eastern monarch issued a charter considered the oldest known declaration of human rights. This charter is known today as the Cyrus Cylinder. The Cyrus Cylinder was discovered in the ruins of Babylon, in

Source: The Cyrus Cylinder And The Ancient Proclamation of Human Rights – Ancient History and Mystery – HTGlobal Media

Category: Blog, History, Politics, Words

De Gaulle’s State of Tomorrow – Palladium

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Modern states created expert-led administrations to serve specific, subordinate functions. Certain questions required technical assessments, for which rulers had to employ competent advisers. But the Industrial Revolution expanded the need for this kind of structure far beyond its initial conception. The centralization of private power demanded the centralization of public power.  Faced with ever-expanding firms with clear objectives and coordinated hierarchies, the state found itself dealing with unprecedented legal, administrative, and industrial complexity at scale. Institution-builders restructured state power to deal with these challenges, one step at a time. Once a subordinate extension of conventional authority, technocracy metastasized into a large, independent authority of its own. The statesman-expert hierarchy has become a partnership upon which the functionality of the state depends. Just as the preservation of order in medieval kingdoms required symbiosis between priest and knight, so the preservation of state capacity in industrial societies requires symbiosis between expert and statesman.

Source: De Gaulle’s State of Tomorrow – Palladium