The Truth Is Out There


Now-former Fox News host Tucker Carlson is pictured during the 2022 FOX Nation Patriot Awards at Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood on Nov. 17.

Commentary

Now-former Fox News host Tucker Carlson is pictured during the 2022 FOX Nation Patriot Awards at Hard Rock Live at Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Hollywood on Nov. 17. (Jason Koerner / Getty Images)

Geraldo Rivera, the man whose height of fame (and infamy, two things he has trouble telling apart) came when a neo-Nazi  broke his nose during an altercation on his trashy syndicated talk show over 30 years ago, would like you to think he Spoke Truth To Power™ when it came to now-former fellow Fox News employee Tucker Carlson.

Twitter users would like Rivera, the token liberal on Fox, to know what they think of him. Namely: “He is such a loser.”

So, as you’ve no doubt heard if you follow cable news in general or Fox News specifically, Carlson, long the network’s top-rated prime-time host, was let go without warning on Monday afternoon.

There was no reason given at the time, just a terse statement from the network that “FOX News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways. We thank him for his service to the network as a host and prior to that as a contributor.”

The general assumption was that it had something to do with the network’s $787 million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems over individuals who came on the network in the wake of the 2020 election and claimed the company’s vote-tabulation software and hardware were responsible for massive voter fraud.

However, Carlson was actually one of the first hosts to explicitly call these theories out on air, and other sources pointed to Carlson’s faith combined with the increasing instability of Fox News shot-caller Rupert Murdoch, now 92.

Regardless of what the reason actually was, that didn’t stop Geraldo Rivera from wading into the controversy like he knew what was inside Al Capone’s vault. and bad-mouthing Carlson in the process.

“I don’t wish ill on anybody, but there is no doubt-as I said at the time-Tucker Carlson’s perverse January 6 conspiracy theory was ‘bulls***,’” Rivera tweeted.

“Having lost the election President Trump incited an insurrection that sought to undermine our Constitutional process.”

Now, first off: If you ever feel the need to start a social media missive with “I don’t wish ill on anybody…”, stop. Stop right there, delete it all, practice deep breathing and share something more useful, like a video of a re-enactment of the Battle of Gettysburg done entirely with hamsters or something like that.

Second, the co-host on Fox News’ “The Five” didn’t follow up with which “perverse January 6 conspiracy theory was ‘bulls***’” and hasn’t tweeted about it since then. Carlson recently aired video of the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol incursion that showed it to be far less of a “coup” or a “threat to democracy” than Democrats have intimated, but Geraldo seems to indicate in his tweet that his qualms go back further.

Needless to say, this reaction was met with near-universal non-acclaim, including from Rivera’s co-host on “The Five,” Greg Gutfeld, who sarcastically called him “a class act”:

Another said it was time for Geraldo to “seek help!”

Another brought up “The Mystery of Al Capone’s Vaults”, the infamous, much-hyped live televised special in which Rivera hosted and did a play-by-play as fortune-hunters blasted into what was supposed to be the gangster’s personal safe to report on what they found. Spoiler alert: Nothing of worth.

Another Twitterer advised Rivera to “take a good hard look in the mirror and look at yourself and reflect, and also use it to comb your hair once in awhile.”

However, two tweets best summed up the entire affair. One remarked that Rivera is a serial loser who somehow still managed to hang onto relevance long after he’d been disgraced many, many times.

Another simply noted that Fox’s, um, interesting personnel decisions was causing him to take his viewership elsewhere:

And that’s the problem with Rivera’s take: The only reason he clings to a job with the network is that he’s a punching-bag liberal. He doesn’t make sound arguments. He hasn’t been much of a reporter for decades now; he’s an éminence grise, sans éminence. He’s there because he can reliably do a bit of shouty-shouty with the rest of “The Five” and that’s about it.

Carlson wasn’t just a real presence at the network, you got the sense he was the one unafraid to speak truth to power. It’s probably part of the reason he’s jobless right now. Rupert Murdoch is supposed to be the ultimate conservative media scion, but at the end of the day, he prefers Geraldo Rivera to Tucker Carlson.

Viewers, on the other hand, may prefer something else, as ratings for Fox’s prime-time lineup in the wake of Carlson’s departure seem to indicate. This is why you hear calls to boycott Fox News from the right on Twitter.

And that’s the problem for Rivera. Geraldo knows full well he can’t bite the hand that feeds him, but he doesn’t have enough sense to keep from biting the hand that keeps him fed — or, by the tone of this tweet, even acknowledging he knows there’s a difference.

To put it another way: After more than a half-century in the media, Geraldo still can’t figure out which vaults he should be breaking into and when someone’s going to break his fucking nose.


RoidRanger / shutterstock.com
RoidRanger / shutterstock.com

In a move that probably didn’t surprise very many people, the charges against Hollywood actor, Joe Biden spokesman and accused killer Alec Baldwin have been formally dropped. Utilizing a legal loophole known as “being a Democrat Party donor,” Baldwin was able to escape being put on trial for manslaughter after he allegedly killed some poor lady on a movie set.

Baldwin was on set for a movie filming in New Mexico in 2021 when the shooting happened. He was ranting about Donald Trump and waving his sidearm from the movie around on set when he (obviously) pulled the trigger. For some reason, the gun had a live round in it, which killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and wounded the movie’s director.

Most people don’t realize this, but all modern firearms – including ones like the prop gun used by Alec Baldwin – are stress tested in a laboratory by gun manufacturers. They put the guns through “drop tests” and all sorts of interesting tests to try to make them accidentally go off. The purpose of the tests is to make sure that before that firearm ends up in someone’s hands, there is one thing, and hopefully only one thing that will make it fire — and that’s when a human being pulls the trigger.

Which is what Alec Baldwin obviously did. His story that the gun “just went off” never made any sense to anyone with basic knowledge of firearms. The truth is that Baldwin was waving the gun around like a reckless and entitled Hollywood liberal and he pulled the trigger, killing Hutchins.

Not that it matters, since the corrupt justice system has now let him off the hook for “committing crimes while being a Democrat.” He’s now free to go smoke crack with Hunter Biden and do some money laundering while cavorting with trafficked Ukrainian hookers, and like the First Son, he’ll never face any consequences.

I stand firmly behind Alec Baldwin, and you should too. That’s the only safe place to be when he’s waving a gun around like the mad democrat human loser that he is.


The current understanding of human rights was built on Kant’s idea of universal human rights

Protesters raise their fists and placards during a demonstration in observance of the International Human Rights day in Manila on Dec. 10, 2022

Protesters raise their fists and placards during a demonstration in observance of the International Human Rights day in Manila on Dec. 10, 2022. (Photo: AFP)

“Ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country.” Politicians and leaders are fond of quoting this challenge posed by John F. Kennedy in his inaugural address on Jan. 20, 1961. They are in a way right to remind us of our responsibilities and duties. But we also need to realize our rights and privileges, which alone can enable us to have duties.

We discuss often on unalienable rights and obligations in every community. But, we must consider the fundamental right that enables all other rights. A key component of the discussion on human rights is the idea of the “right to have rights.” In the years following World War II, this idea was frequently linked to the German political philosopher Hannah Arendt. She contended that the right to own rights is the most fundamental of all rights. We will talk about the history of this idea, how important it is in today’s political debate, and the problems it creates for the fulfilment of human rights in this article.

Origins of the Right to Have Rights

The concept of the “right to have rights” may be found in the writings of Enlightenment theorists including French philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau and German scholar Immanuel Kant. The current understanding of human rights was built on Kant’s idea of universal human rights, which was based on each person’s intrinsic value and dignity. The evolution of the human rights discourse was also inspired by Rousseau’s social contract theory, which holds that people voluntarily cede part of their rights to the state in exchange for safety and security.

The contemporary notion of the “right to have rights” originated with Arendt’s examination of the idea of statelessness, i.e., when people have no political state to protect them.  The migrants and refugees are the contemporary examples.

The notion of the “right to have rights” originated in the aftermath of World War II and the Holocaust, which showed the limits of the existing legal and political frameworks for defending human rights of both individuals and groups.

Hannah Arendt (1906-1975), a German-Jewish philosopher who escaped Europe during the war, articulated this thesis in her important contribution “The Origins of Totalitarianism.” In this book, Arendt maintained that the human rights breaches committed by Nazi Germany were made possible by the weakening of the legal and political protections that had previously guaranteed individual liberty. According to Arendt, the Holocaust showed how even the most fundamental rights, like the right to life, might be violated when people did not have the ability to exercise their rights.

Significance of the Right to Have Rights

Since it highlights the significance of political and legal safeguards for human rights, the right to have rights is crucial in today’s political and ethical discourse. It emphasizes that in addition to being individual liberties, human rights are also communal goods that rely on the presence of governmental structures capable of defending them. In this view, the manifestation of other human rights, such as the freedom of expression, the freedom of religion, and the right to a fair trial, is a prerequisite for the achievement of the right to possess rights.

Some Challenges to the Realization of the Right to have Rights

Despite its significance, the right to have rights faces numerous challenges in the contemporary world. The emergence of authoritarian regimes, which threaten democratic institutions and weaken the political and legal safeguards for human rights, is one of the biggest challenges.

The continuation of structural disparities that restrict access to governmental and political institutions, particularly for vulnerable groups including refugees, immigrants, and racial and ethnic minorities, is another problem. The plight of the migrants, who are compelled to flee their own country and are left in the hands of “merchants of death,” seriously tests the morality of the developed world. Their cries for justice and the heinous denial of their right to any rights is a wake-up call for all of mankind.

The neoliberal or libertarian emphasis on individual rights above or against common goods, which frequently favors free market over social wellbeing, puts the right to have rights in jeopardy, for many disadvantaged people.

In conclusion, the right to have rights is a vital component of the human rights discourse that highlights the significance of legal and political safeguards for individual liberty. This idea was developed in the wake of the Holocaust and World War II, and it is still important in today’s political debate.

The growth of authoritarian regimes, the continuation of structural disparities, and the neoliberal emphasis on individual rights are only a few of the obstacles that the right to have rights must overcome. To overcome these obstacles, everyone must work together to defend and advance the political and legal frameworks that uphold even the most basic rights.

It is the absolute minimum we can do to protect our fundamental rights, especially those of immigrants and stateless people. The most fundamental right, which serves as the foundation for all other rights, is the right to one’s political identity.

The Church is very forthright in demanding its rights.  It stands for the rights of the poor, tribal and marginalized people, inspired by Pope Francis. At the same time, the Church needs to reflect on its moral obligation to provide the right to have rights, especially to its own laity and to women religious.

The Church needs to realize that reminding them of their duty can only be done, if it recognize its primarily rights and above all the right to have rights. That comes from the very fact of God having created all of us in his own image and likeness. Then we can do justice to the fundamental rights (Maulik Adhikar) that the Indian constitution so proudly speaks of!


Overpopulation is a Myth

Have you ever heard the argument, “We need abortion because the world would be overpopulated otherwise. We won’t have enough resources for everyone if all the babies were born.”
Or maybe someone challenged you with conversations about poverty, stating the claim that abortion is merciful when confronted with lack of financial resources or other material challenges. Abortion and overpopulation is a complex issue.

Let’s get one thing straight first: the world is not overpopulated. In fact, people like Elon Musk propose quite the opposite – that a global baby bust is going to be our demise. In the United States, the population has been below replacement rate since the 1970s (people are not being born at a higher rate than people are dying). So this “crisis” is very much overstated, at the very least.

The myth of overpopulation originated in 1798 with Thomas Malthus. In An Essay on the Principles of Population, Malthus predicted that overpopulation would lead to a food shortage by 1890, ultimately leading to the destruction of humanity. This “crisis” was re-predicted numerous times over the past two centuries, but conveniently rescheduled when it did not occur. Yet, here we are, over 100 years later with the highest population of people on earth and the best food production rate in history. 

The myth stems from the idea that there are so many people on the planet that our resources can’t possibly keep up. But, The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations as well as the World Food Programme say, “There is enough food in the world today for everyone to have the nourishment necessary for a healthy and productive life.” And “the world currently produces enough food for everybody, but many people do not have access to it.” In other words, what we have is a distribution problem – not a supply problem. 

The World Food Programme lists 6 key causes of hunger, and overpopulation is not one of them. Reducing the number of hungry people will not make people less hungry if the infrastructure to get resources to them is inadequate, or war is destroying crops and interfering with relief efforts. The tendency to suggest abortion as a “solution” to suffering suggests that we ought to eliminate the sufferer instead of solving problems. 

Abortion and Overpopulation – Is it a Solution?


Although we’ve already established that overpopulation is a myth, even if the earth was overpopulated, does that justify the taking of innocent life?

Killing living human beings is not an acceptable solution to any problem. If we attempted to kill human beings to solve the overpopulation problem, it would make the most sense to kill the people who are not contributing to society – toddlers and infants. Is it morally acceptable to kill them? No. We would never accept the killing of toddlers to reduce the population, so if we believe in true human equality, we cannot accept killing of preborn human beings to accomplish the same goal.

In the name of overpopulation, abortion is justified by its supporters because they refuse to acknowledge the humanity of the preborn, not because we are actually lacking in resources. Conversations about abortion must always start and end with what abortion is and what preborn humans are

Below are some great videos to review to better understand the myth of overpopulation and limited resources.

Overpopulation: The Making of a Myth

7 Billion People: Everybody Relax!

Urbanization: Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad City

Poverty: Where We All Started

Food: There’s Lots Of It


ABC News ran an article this week urging everyone to just forget all about that whole COVID-19 pandemic thing, and any “trauma” they may have experienced because of it. Really? Is that what we should do? Especially since the mainstream media, who teamed up with Tony “Dr. Doom” Fauci, were the main ones who traumatized and brainwashed people through the whole ordeal.

The article informs its readers, “Research has shown the pandemic has led to increased rates of anxiety, depression, psychosis, loneliness and other mental health issues.”

But that’s not true. The “pandemic” didn’t do any of those things. The government and media response to the pandemic caused those things.

The coronavirus didn’t keep kids out of school, causing a generational loss in learning which will have catastrophic effects on America for years to come. The leftwing teacher unions did that. Coronavirus didn’t cause the suicide rate for teenage girls to increase by 50%. The social isolation and depression that resulted from the lockdowns did that.

Remember the mom who was tasered and arrested at her son’s football game for not wearing a mask as she was sitting alone, far away from any other people? Coronavirus didn’t do that. The government and the fear incited by the mainstream media did that.

People died alone in nursing homes, unable to hug their own spouses or their grandchildren at the end of their lives, because of the government and the media. People lost their businesses and their livelihoods. People got fired from their jobs for refusing to take an experimental medicine they didn’t want.

Anyway, to ABC News’ claim that we should all just forget about what was done during the pandemic so we can move on: No thanks. We won’t forget and we won’t forgive. A lot of MSM and government officials deserve to go to prison for what they did to the American people during the pandemic.


Is the story of Jesus just a rip-off of ancient pagan resurrection tales?

Skeptics will argue that Jesus’ resurrection is just one more instance of the dying-and-rising-god motif prevalent in the religions of the ancient Near East. The Scottish social anthropologist James Frazer popularized this motif in his 1890 book The Golden Bough: A Study in Comparative Religion. The idea continued in modern skeptic circles, as the popular film Zeitgeist has shown.

Skeptics like to parallel Jesus’ resurrection with pagan deities such as the Egyptian gods Osiris and Horus, as well as the Greek gods Attis and Adonis. But are these parallels accurate? Do these claims undermine the Christian story of Jesus’ resurrection, making our Christian faith in vain? Here are four responses.

Response 1: The objection disregards the evidence that supports the historical reliability of the Gospel accounts of Jesus’ resurrection.

Multiple eyewitnesses and close associates of eyewitnesses report Jesus’ resurrection (e.g., Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, James, Peter, the women, Clement of Rome, and Polycarp). Paul’s creedal formula—“Christ died . . . was buried . . . and rose on the third day” (1 Cor. 15:3-5)—dates to within six years of Jesus’ death and resurrection, thus satisfying the early testimony criterion. Paul maintains that this saying was a part of the apostolic preaching (1 Cor. 15:11), and therefore it is probable that he received it in A.D. 36, when he visited Peter and James in Jerusalem three years after his conversion in A.D. 33 (Gal. 1:18-19). If he received it at that time, then that means the saying must have been formulated prior to that, thus dating it to within five years after Jesus’ death (A.D. 30).

The historicity of Jesus’ resurrection also stands out when one considers how the alternative naturalistic explanations (e.g., Conspiracy Theory, Hallucination Theory, Legend Theory, etc.) fail in accounting for the historical details that make up the resurrection narratives. For the pagan dying-and-rising-god motif to be a plausible explanation, a skeptic would have to undermine the historicity of the details in the resurrection narratives—a project that will not succeed in the face of all the evidence to the contrary.

Response 2: Pagans generally didn’t believe in resurrection.

In her essay “Does the Story of Jesus Mimic Pagan Mystery Stories?”, Christian apologist Mary Jo Sharp writes, “In the ancient pagan world, death was a one-way street” (Come Let Us Reason). St. Athanasius (296-373) points this out in his work On the Incarnation:

For although the Greeks have told all manner of false tales, yet they were not able to feign a resurrection of their idols— for it never crossed their mind, whether it be at all possible for the body again to exist after death.

This is confirmed in Acts 17, when the Athenians mock Paul for his preaching about Christ’s resurrection (32). Greek literature even contains passages mocking the idea of bringing someone back from the dead. In the Iliad, after Achilles kills Priam’s son Hector, Achilles taunts the grief-stricken father, saying Priam won’t be able to bring his son back.

How could the early Christians have copied from Greek mythology when the Greek worldview was hostile to the Christian idea of a bodily resurrection?

A skeptic may answer, “Perhaps resurrection was foreign to the Greeks, but not to the Egyptians. Both Osiris and Horus died and rose again. Maybe the Christians copied from Egyptian mythology.” This leads us to our third response.

Response 3:  Parallels between the story of the rising Jesus and the stories of rising pagan deities are false.

Take as an example the most common alleged parallel: the Egyptian god Osiris. Scholars are quick to point out that in Egyptian mythology, Osiris never really rose from the dead; he reigned as king of the underworld. As the Egyptologist Henri Frankfort explains in his book Kingship and the Gods, “Osiris . . . was not a dying god at all but a dead god. He never returned among the living.”

This is why the Book of the Dead has a prayer the Egyptian believer prayed to Osiris requesting a permanent place in the afterlife: “Grant thou [Osiris] to me a place in the nether-world, near the lords of right and truth, my estate may it be permanent in Sekhet-hetep.”

How can there be a parallel between Jesus and Osiris’s experience of life after death if Osiris never came back to this life?

The Egyptian god Horus is said to have been stung by a scorpion and then revived by his mother Isis after she performed magical spells given to her by the god Thoth. But it is disputed as to whether the mythology says Horus actually died.

If he didn’t die and only became ill, then obviously there is no parallel with Jesus. But if he did die, then the death and raising of Horus would still be very different in every other detail from the death and resurrection of Jesus.

Since the suggested parallels are so weak, there is no reason to think the early Christians borrowed the Egyptian dying-and-rising deities to construct their story about Jesus.

The same applies to parallels proposed outside Egyptian mythology. For example, after dying, the spirit of the Phrygian vegetation god Attis entered a pine tree. That’s hardly a bodily resurrection.

Response 4: Christians had no need to borrow the concept of resurrection from paganism since they already had it in Judaism.

Unlike pagans, first-century Jews generally believed in a resurrection—the Sadducees being an exception (Acts 23:8). Martha reassures Jesus of her belief that her brother Lazarus will “rise again in the resurrection at the last day” (John 11:24). This is no surprise, given that the Jewish prophets foretold it (Isa. 26:19; Dan. 12:2), and her Jewish ancestors believed it (2 Macc. 7:23).

If the Jews believed in the concept of resurrection, then Christians would not have needed to go outside their Jewish culture to borrow the concept of resurrection when such a concept was already a part of it. The appeal to an outside source would be unnecessary.

The question is not “where did the early Christians get the idea of a resurrection?” Rather, given their Jewish culture, the question is “where did they get the idea of someone rising before the general resurrection at the end of time?” We should also ask why the early Christians believed in a resurrected Messiah. As N.T. Wright explains in his book The Resurrection of the Son of God, these beliefs were not part of Jewish theology in the first century. The only adequate explanation of these facts is Jesus’ resurrection.

Christianity is not a copycat religion. The “dying and rising god” objection doesn’t discredit the Gospel accounts of Jesus’ resurrection. Although, by itself, this doesn’t show that Jesus was raised, it does show that Christianity’s central claim is not taken from pagan myth.


KJP Crosses a Bright Red Line at White House – Critics Accuse Her of Incitement Charge

What’s Happening:

Not that long ago, a horrific school shooting took the life of six Americans. Three of those Americans were children. Americans have mourned the loss of life, which took place in a Christian school in Nashville.

Such terrible events require a response from our leaders. Unfortunately, the White House’s response has been non-existent. Joe Biden has done nothing to assure Christians that targeted attacks like this won’t happen again. And now, his press secretary crossed a shocking line.

From Fox News:

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre sparked outrage on Thursday after she praised “fierce” kids who are transgender for their ability to “fight back.” […]

“A trans person killed three Christian children just over a week ago and now the White House is now telling them to fight back,” State Freedom Caucus Network communications director Greg Price tweeted…

“This kind of rhetoric helped cause Nashville… At least by liberals’ own logic,” Conservative writer Pradheep J. Shanker wrote, tagging Jean-Pierre in the tweet.

Unbelievable. The White House is making it clear what side they are on. The press secretary praised transgender young people who “fight back” against Americans who oppose this vile ideology. Jean-Pierre even criticized red states which passed laws to protect children from predators who would force transgenderism onto them.

Not a word about Christians being targeted by killers. Not a condemnation of a radical group that seeks to mutilate children, brainwash vulnerable students, and encourage violence against dissenters.

This kind of aggression wasn’t unique to the Nashville shooter. Across America, transgender activists encourage their comrades to “fight back.” They claim anyone who disagrees with their radical views are threats to their existence.

And now, we have someone from the White House calling on these unhealthy young people to fight those who disagree with them.

Why wouldn’t we expect some of them to pick up guns and shoot Christians? KJP could be responsible for the next mass shooting with this reckless talk. Democrats have long accused Republicans of “inciting violence.”

Shouldn’t we hold KJP to the same standard? Why shouldn’t she be fired for saying this?

Key Takeaways:

  • White House press secretary, Karine Jean-Pierre, called on transgenders to “fight back.”
  • This comes just days after a transgender murdered six Americans in a Christian school.
  • KJP is an LGBT activist who is seemingly encouraging violence against Americans.

David Sorensen <david@stopworldcontrol.com>

Dear friends worldwide,I neglected to include the link to the online version of the post that gives more information about how children around the world are being sexualized, as part of UN Agenda 2030. Here it is:https://www.stopworldcontrol.com/who-pedophilesThere you can download the documents from the UN and WHO that literally instruct teachers to teach toddlers masturbation.

I am asking you to please spread this information far and wide. Don’t be afraid.I am gathering an enormous amount of evidence to make a full report on this. Please support this effort with a donation. We want to have all this material translated professionally into seven languages (and more to come) and we need funds for this.Together we can prevent this horrendous agenda.
Don’t fall for their magic tricks
Magic
The WHO and UN hire masterful word magicians who are able to make this horror sound like a wonderful thing. When you read their documents it all is explained in such a way that you get the feeling they are saints straight from heaven who mean so well, and want to help the world.

But it is extreme deception, as what is actually being said, and what is literally being done in the schools, is mass child abuse.

Please be sharp in your mind and learn to discern when reading the UN and WHO documents. Understand what these guidelines effectively imply. Remember these are the organizations who have unleashed the pandemic onto humanity, they are the ones who suppressed every working treatment for C0VID, they are the ones who censor millions of doctors and scientists worldwide, they are the ones who mandate the highly toxic injections that are killing millions, they are the ones who push for a one world government, and so on.

We are dealing with psychopaths of the worst kind, who have the skill to hide their most nefarious crimes under a layer of beautiful words that claim to help the world.

While aggressively destroying every and all human rights worldwide during pandemics, they claim to protect the “human right of learning kids to masturbate at age 5”. Normalizing pedophilia and child abuse is not part of “human rights”. Please see through their smokescreens and refined methods of hypnotizing humanity with magical word plays.

Go to the online version where you can download their hypnotizing, twisted mind controlling documents, and please share this page.

And by all means, please support our effort to expose this to humanity, in many languages. We cannot do this alone. Reaching millions is not cheap.

Please support us.
David Sorensen
StopWorldControl.com
Please don’t ignore this, as almost everyone does. Be different. Stand with us in this fight. We cannot do this alone. Go here to support this critical mission:https://www.stopworldcontrol.com/support
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Support our mission to protect the children
StopWorldControl.com is a ministry by Hope for Humanity PMA. Our goal is to build a better world, by bringing truth and hope to people in every nation. Therefore we provide a platform for world leading scientists, lawyers, physicians, journalists and other experts that reveal critical information that humanity needs to be aware of. We reveal criminal activity and corruption in the high levels of our society, so the people can defend themselves against these criminal practices, and build a better world together. David Sorensen is the founder of Hope for Humanity and StopWorldControl.com David is a strong believer in a loving Creator who has a beautiful plan for our world, and who wants to fill us with love that overcomes evil.


Wednesday, March 22, 2023 by: Ethan Huff
Tags: badhealthbadmedicinebig governmentBig Pharmabiological weaponCOVIDDangerous MedicineDatadepopulationgenocidepandemicpharmaceutical fraudspike proteinvaccinatedVaccine deathsvaccine warsvaccines

This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author

Bypass censorship by sharing this link:

Image: One in every 73 people “vaccinated” for covid wound up DEAD by June 2022, government data show

(Natural News) Official numbers published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), a government-run institution in the United Kingdom, show that by the time June 1, 2022, arrived, one in every 73 people in England who got “vaccinated” for the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) had perished – this compared to just one in every 172 unvaccinated Brits.

In every single age group, the data shows that the mortality rate is highest among those who took the jab(s) and lowest among those who just said no to the experimental drugs and instead relied on their own natural immunity for protection.

Keep in mind that for many months prior to the data release, the UK government denied even calculating it, let alone possessing it. Now, suddenly, the truth is finally coming out, thanks to a Freedom of Information request, that the death jabs are, in fact, taking lives at an astoundingly high rate.

(Related: In 2021 at the height of covid, an America’s Frontline Doctors attorney filed a lawsuit against the United States government over 45,000 covid “vaccine” deaths that had been identified at that time.)

Nearly six times as many vaccinated people died in England compared to unvaccinated

The largest independent producer of official statistics and the premier recognized national statistical institute of the UK, the ONS published a dataset last July containing a host of deeply disturbing data on deaths by vaccination status through England between Jan. 1, 2021, and May 31, 2022. This data shows that following covid injection, 41,117 people died “with covid” after having been jabbed for it. Another 565,420 people died “without covid,” also after having gotten jabbed for the alleged virus.

All in all, some 606,537 people died after getting injected for covid, which is far more than the 109,891 unvaccinated people in England who died during the same timeframe.

The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) published its own data on overall vaccine uptake in England, revealing that 18.9 million Brits just said no to covid shots while 63.4 million others, sadly for them, just said yes. Based on this, we can calculate the rate of death among the two groups, which is starkly contrasting.

“The official figures unfortunately confirm that mortality rates per 100,000 are the lowest among the unvaccinated population in every single age group in England,” reported The Exposé. “And the data reveals the gap between the unvaccinated and vaccinated populations in terms of mortality rates is widening by the month.”

“There is no other conclusion that can be found for the fact mortality rates per 100,000 are the lowest among the unvaccinated other than that the Covid-19 injections are killing people … This is precisely why, according to the figures that the Government has made available, 1 in every 73 vaccinated people was dead by the beginning of June 2022 compared to just 1 in every 172 unvaccinated people.”

In the comments, someone pointed out that the deaths assigned as “covid” deaths in the official figures are “impossible to believe,” seeing as how they are “based on a fraudulent test and thus the ratio in favour of non vaccinated people in reality is far better” than even the data that we do have.

Another wrote that he basically gave up on trying to tell people who inherently trust the medical profession about any of this because they are already too deeply propagandized to listen to the truth.

“I just let them move ahead since by now they are fully vaxxed,” this person added. “One of my Air Force buddies who read me the riot act about the vaxs is now dying of 3 kinds of cancer no doubt brought on by his taking the vac’s and the boosters – I don’t mention it but I know that is what is happening.”

The latest news about the injury and death toll from the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) “vaccination” scheme can be found at VaccineDeaths.com.

Sources for this article include:

Expose-News.com

NaturalNews.com


8 Facts about Russia and Its Ukrainian War

Regardless of how you look at the War in Ukraine, certain facts contradict the present media narrative of a struggle between liberal globalism and a theocratic regime. Several of these facts were especially evident in President Putin’s first-anniversary speech to the Federation Assembly about the war and the nation’s future. Others can be gleaned from the news.

These facts are:

  1. The Putin game plan follows Alexander Dugin’s “fourth political theory” against globalism. Inside this theory, the different peoples create civilizations, forming large civilizational spaces and blocs. The ideologues believe that smaller nation-states enjoy the semblance of sovereignty under the umbrella of “politically organized, militarily capable civilizational centers that represent the poles of a multipolar world.” [Translation: Ukraine has no right to be a free, independent, and sovereign nation.]
  2. The war in Ukraine seeks to force the unwilling Ukrainian nation under this umbrella. The conflict has triggered irrevocable political and economic ruptures with the globalized world that facilitated the formation of a multipolar world.
  3. Until 2022, Russia was wholeheartedly a part of the globalist society it now claims to hate. Its economy was fully integrated into the global network. Its products, especially oil, natural gas and grain, were sold in world commodity markets delineated in dollars. Before the abrupt change of events, its cities welcomed the multinational retailers found all over its vast territory. The wave after wave of sanctions testify to the huge extent of this integration and the difficulty of disentanglement.
  4. Russia, unfortunately, shares in the moral decadence of the modern world. The state of its decay is comparable to Western countries. The nation suffers from the world’s highest abortion ratelow birth rateslow church attendance and a decline of marriage. Contrary to the media reports of a theocracy, President Putin has no objections to an LGBTQ+ presence in Russia (save for children). In his Feb. 21 speech, he made a special point to say, “Adult people can do as they please. Russian people have always seen it that way and always will: no one is going to intrude into other people’s private lives, and their people are not going to do it, either.”
  5. Both Russia and the West are the fruit of modernity. The two systems share philosophical roots dating back to the French Revolution. The West adopted the soft liberal model now in the process of decay. Russia now follows the hardline Nietzschean nationalist model, heavily influenced by German thinkers like Martin Heidegger. Both sides are also influenced by the harmful effects of existentialist and postmodern thinkers.
  6. Both systems put great faith in the power of the State. Western political establishments have long promoted massive programs, regulations and networks. Putin’s speech primarily outlined a mountain of government programs and initiatives costing trillions of rubles to address the needs of citizens in a State-driven society.
  7. True to their modern origins, both systems are secular in their expression. Liberalism, by its nature, has always (falsely) claimed to be neutral in matters of religion. However, Putin’s nearly forty-page major speech surprisingly does not mention the Christian God and addresses no religious themes that might be expected in these times of trial.

These seven facts illustrate that the media’s portrayal is flawed. The real fight is not between a decadent ultra-liberal globalized world and a theocratic, autocratic East. The conflict involves an entire world that is morally rotten, philosophically flawed, financially compromised and politically disordered. Both systems represent two sides of the same debased coin of modernity.

On one side are those who defend the post-war order (with all its errors). On the other side is the Russia-China-Iran axis that wants to break that order and establish its enigmatic multipolar anti-Western world.

Ukraine is the unwilling stage for the drama to destroy the post-war order and trigger the next and worse phase of a Revolutionary process hell-bent on the destruction of what remains of the Christian West. Suffice it to say the Ukrainian invasion did not go according to plan. The unexpected Ukrainian defense of its sovereignty upset the narrative.

This gives rise to an eighth fact, which must be considered to evaluate the two causes.

  1. Humanity has not heeded the Message of Fatima. In 1917, Our Lady in Fatima, Portugal, warned the world of the need for prayer, specifically the rosary, penance and amendment of life to escape divine chastisement. If Russia were consecrated to the Message of Fatima, Russia promised it would convert to the Roman Catholic Faith.

Thus, those looking for political solutions inside the two secular frameworks will be disappointed. The fundamental reform that is needed is a moral one. The ultimate solution will be a supernatural one. However, people refuse to consider the supernatural or moral.

Eternal and Natural Law: The Foundation of Morals and Law

The solution to the world’s problems must come through The Church and its doctrines. While the West ignored the appeal persevering in its decadence, tiny pockets of devout Catholics in the West and Ukraine still exist who take Fatima seriously. However, Russia (and its allies China and Iran) deny Fatima, the rosary or even the need for a conversion.

At this point, the outcome is unclear. So much can happen should war’s suffering change the hearts of individuals and turn them toward God. The Message of Fatima’s plan is superior to those of men. Victory will come to those who listen to this heavenly request and not the flawed designs of men.


The case for contraception is a non-starter . . . even if a high-ranking Roman Catholic Church official is making it.

Recently, the National Catholic Reporter (NCR) ran an article on the morality of contraception. The article was occasioned by a conference held in Rome this past December that offered a critical response to the Pontifical Academy for Life’s publication last summer of its base text, Theological Ethics of Life (TEL).

In his presentation of TEL, Archbishop Vincenzo Paglia called for a “radical paradigm change” in the Church’s moral teaching, especially as it bears on contraception. Feigning fairness in its reporting on TEL and on the criticism it received by the Rome conference, the NCR article offers what could aptly be described as a hit piece on Humanae Vitae (HV) and the pontificate of John Paul II. In the NCR article’s presentation of the issue, we find something old—a rehash of the “same old, same old”—and something new.

The new is the attempt to turn the dissent argument (dissent against Church teaching on contraception) on its head, and instead recast the rejection of HV as—wait for it—representing the real infallible teaching of the Church’s ordinary universal magisterium. (Note that this latter refers to the longstanding teaching of the bishops around the world in union with the supreme pontiff. Catholic doctrine holds this teaching to be infallible and thus irreformable.) To pull off this quixotic feat, the authors resort to sophistry and a highly flawed view of magisterial teaching.

The key move centers on how the authors interpret the vote of the papal commission of Paul VI that was tasked with considering the issue of birth control; here nine bishops voted against the view that contraception constitutes an intrinsic evil, whereas three bishops voted for it and three others abstained. The same nine bishops voted in favor of the commission’s majority report favoring the moral permissibility of contraception (the commission comprised seventy-one members).

“Given the votes of the commission’s bishops,” the NCR article concludes, “it is an incredible stretch of the imagination and dishonors the consciences of the bishops to claim that the ordinary universal Magisterium declares this teaching irreformable.”

Wow. Never mind that for bishops to partake in the infallibility of the Church’s ordinary universal Magisterium, they must teach in union with the bishop of Rome. And never mind that not one, but two bishops of Rome—in two encyclicals and not merely by way of approbation of the vote of a papal commission—have expressly condemned contraception as an intrinsic evil: Paul VI in HV and John Paul II in Veritatis Splendor (80). And never mind the biblical foundation of the Church’s teaching, as Genesis 38:9-10 provides a manifest condemnation of unnatural contraception—which thereby attests to the truly longstanding nature of the Church’s traditional position. Instead, the NCR article would have us believe that the opinion—framed as the sacrosanct “consciences”—of nine out of fifteen bishops on a papal commission suffice to represent the “ordinary universal Magisterium.”  Now, that marks an incredible stretch of the imagination.

Furthermore, few know that the “consciences”—and subsequently the votes—of the nine bishops labored under an erroneous understanding of the science of contraception. They believed that the birth control pill acted not as a block or inhibition of the natural procreative process, but as a kind of medication that “helped nature” by prolonging the woman’s natural period of infertility. (We know this from the testimony of Georges Cardinal Cottier, a close friend of the Swiss Dominican who served as the secretary of the papal commission.) It goes without saying that a proper judgment of conscience requires that it be rightly informed.

What is not new in this article, despite its attempt to dress it differently, is the tired and worn-out framing of the moral terms of the debate. The key line runs thus: “The two positions [on contraception] reflect two different models of marriage: the traditional procreative model [enshrined in HV] focused on the ‘natural’ outcome of the act of sexual intercourse; the majority report [of the Paul VI commission] was based on the new interpersonal union model that emerged from the council that focused on the total meaning of marriage and of sexual intercourse within the marriage relationship” (emphasis original). The interpersonal union model, we are further told, gives priority to “pastoral guidance and subjective conscience” and is “principle-oriented, relational-focused, dynamic, developmental, and inductive.” Proponents of this model include “the majority [of] faithful” and “credible, mature, and adult Catholic theologians” along with “most Catholic couples [whose] faith and practice” rest on “practical judgment” and on “conscience before God.”

Opposed to this, the procreative model gives priority to “objective norms” and to “absolutist” magisterial pronouncements and is “largely law-oriented, legalistic, act-focused, static, and deductive.” Adherents of this model constitute a “concerted minority” of “conservative” theologians who are “scathingly critical” of the interpersonal union model and of Archbishop Paglia’s call for a paradigm shift in the Church’s moral teaching. More fundamentally, the procreative model, we are assured, has been “thoroughly deconstructed,” since the evident “flaws” in its “foundational principle” have been exposed for all to see—so much so that the “entire edifice” of Catholic teaching that stands on this model “crumbles.”

You get the idea. Ogres, those pesky “conservative” theologians.

As one of the presenters at the Rome conference that the NCR article seeks to discredit, I reject this article’s caricature of the so-called “procreative model.” The article falls prey to a specious definition of marriage and to an underlying reductive and fragmented anthropology.

Catholic moral teaching defines marriage as a procreative-unitive institution. This follows upon the way our sexuality participates in the nature of the human person as a body-soul composite unity. Because our bodies are of an animal-like sort, they are sexually (biologically) differentiated. From this perspective, human sexuality is for the obvious purpose of procreation. Yet, as we are not pure bodies, but incarnate (rational) spirits with an ordering to interpersonal love, human sexuality also owns an essential ordering to interpersonal unitive love. In brief, God has endowed us with a sexed design for the joint purpose of procreation and unitive love, as HV makes plain.

The NCR article gets it flatly wrong, then, when it holds that the so-called procreative model “focuses”—exclusively, it seems—“on the natural outcome of the act of sexual intercourse.” By focusing on human sexuality as both procreative and unitive in design, this model—let us call it instead the Humanae Vitae model—focuses more fundamentally on the truth of the human person (the entire person) as a body-soul unity. Because body and soul are inseparable in the human person, so are the procreative and unitive orderings. In truth, then, it is the HV model that focuses on “the total meaning of marriage,” a meaning that includes—indeed, unites—the procreative and unitive dimensions of sex.

But the NCR article insists that it is the so-called interpersonal union model that focuses on “the total meaning of marriage”—a total meaning that can, in the name of “interpersonal union,” embrace the direct suppression of procreation by sterilizing the sexual act . The problem here is obvious: the interpersonal union model implies not a total, but a partial meaning of marriage—namely, as unitive. Even if the article acknowledges that the total meaning of marriage encompasses the “act of sexual intercourse” and its “natural outcome,” it is only as a lower, secondary or accidental good, one that remains at all points subordinate to, and thus governed by, the unitive dimension. That the article reduces the procreative dimension to a mere “act” (no doubt similar to other acts, like paying the bills) underscores this.

Marriage, on this view, is essentially a unitive bond, an interpersonal union in love. Only accidentally is it procreative.

The anthropology on which this view of sex and marriage stands clearly emerges. By elevating the unitive dimension (“interpersonal union”) to a rank above the “act” of sexual intercourse, to the extent that this dimension captures “the total meaning of marriage,” the authors of this article disconnect the act of sexual intercourse from the proper human meaning of marriage. This could be only if the body were not integral to the essential identity of the human person, and thus to the moral agency of the acting person. In other words, we are confronted here with a reductive and fragmented view of the human person, where the body in its biological structuring, inclusive of sex, becomes relegated to a sub-human sphere, detached from the rational dimension of human life and operating with its own processes and laws. (We witness the same approach in the wider educational field, where sex education is typically offered in a “health” class rather than in a morality class.)

Objections to HV and to the Church’s moral condemnation of contraception always run along these anthropological lines. Always. And it is high time we tag this for what it is: a derisive, dismissive disdain for the body, especially in its biological structuring. We can attach many labels to this view of the human person—gnostic, angelistic, dualistic, Cartesian—but one designation that such a view, and the moral position that follows, cannot lay claim to is “interpersonal.” Since the human person is his body and his soul, interpersonal action is always embodied, biologically structured action, particularly when it involves sex. Period. Full stop.

There are numerous other errors in the NCR article. I will mention here only the most egregious: that the moral difference between natural family planning (NFP) and artificial contraception is supposedly contrived and “morally unjustifiable.” This issue has been treated thoroughly many times, but for the present, suffice it to say that the authors fail to distinguish between the act considered objectively in itself and the subjective intention of those committing the act. The moral difference between NFP and contraception arises from the former, not the latter.

In sum, despite what the NCR puts forth, the Church’s moral teaching on contraception has not been “thoroughly deconstructed.” It has not “crumbled.” And the “inseparability principle” on which it stands (the inseparability of the procreative and unitive dimensions of marriage) has hardly been “demonstrated to be false.” To suggest as much is illusory. Worse, it is a ruse masking a disdain for the human body, as if it were an object to be manipulated and hygienically controlled in a purely utilitarian manner, like a specimen in a lab.

At its core, the Church’s teaching on contraception champions the nobility and sacred dignity of the body. This it does by insisting that moral meaning and purpose suffuse the procreative (biological) ordering of sex (to the extent that we can never impede this ordering), just as the body is suffused with moral meaning and purpose. Church teaching on contraception remains true because the human person as a body-soul unity—the foundation of this teaching—remains true. This the Church will never forsake.


According to new provisional data from the Scottish government, there were 7,314 deaths registered in January 2023, an increase of 17.7% compared to the average of 6,212. For the second week of January, there were more deaths in Scotland than ever before, including during the peak of the pandemic. Concurrently, there were 4,159 births registered in January 2023, a decrease of 6.8% compared to the average of 4,463. In other words, between a dearth of births and a plethora of deaths, there were roughly 1,400 fewer souls, the equivalent of roughly 86,000 in the United States. This is long after COVID. Why is there zero concern?

What on earth will it take to pull these death shots from the market?

Die Welt, a paper based in the home country of Pfizer partner BioNTech, revealed last week in a long expose what many of us have long known. All those sudden deaths, heart attacks, and strokes we’ve been witnessing over the past two years were indeed observed during the Pfizer clinical trial that supposedly showed the shots to be 100% safe and effective. The company simply covered up the severe adverse events by kicking those participants out of the trial and/or suggesting without evidence that the deaths had nothing to do with the experiment.

Remember, the CDC announced a few weeks ago that it had finally study a potential association between the COVID shots and strokes. Well, it turns out the agency had the opportunity to study it already in 2020 before a single human being outside the trial was injected. “Patient no. 11621327” was more than a mere number. He was a human being found dead from a stroke in his apartment just three days after the second dose. Typically, with a novel product in trial, any death – even one not so sudden – makes the product suspect until it is proven innocent. Yet in this case, Pfizer simply dismissed the death as not related to the vaccine, just as the company did with Patient #11521497, who died 20 days later from cardiac arrest.

The article also provides more details on the Buenos Aires trial site, the largest one in the world, in which attorney Augusto Roux was severely injured with pericarditis and liver damage. Instead of being recorded as a severe adverse event, he was marked as having had COVID (even though he tested negative) and was summarily removed from the trial. Roux was on my podcast last July and told me Pfizer refused to help treat his injury because officials felt it had nothing to do with the vaccine, and insurance also refused to pay for treatment because the insurance company blamed it on him willingly joining the trial.

Die Welt reports that on Aug. 31, 2020, 53 of those in the trial in Buenos Aires were unblinded and removed from the trial against the protocol, which calls for this only “in emergencies” (unless this was indeed an emergency!). By the end of the second dose, a further 200 individuals were removed from the trial, meaning that overall, more than 250 of the original 1231 participants were terminated, thereby making the entirety of the data from the largest trial site irrelevant to use in the final trial results.

Overall, 21 participants in Pfizer’s phase 3 trial died, as compared to 17 in the control group before they were unblinded, which should have been a red flag before the shot ever took off. Pfizer claimed there was no evidence anyone died from the vaccine, but after it’s been revealed that a number of people in the trial suffered heart ailments and strokes, the company’s defense holds no water. Yet here we are, over two years later, and the shots are still on the market, promoted like manna from heaven, and even mandated in most hospitals and universities, including in red states. How is this not the top public policy issue of our day?

Consider the following from a public policy standpoint. Pfizer gets the government to pony up billions in taxpayer dollars for the shots, several billion more to promote, advertise, distribute, and mandate them on every human being alive – all while absolving Pfizer of liability. So how do we know the shots are safe? Who gets to monitor the clinical trial? The very manufacturer that was absolved of liability by the government! The Die Welt article even mentions that Pfizer pushed through a liability waiver on its contract not just for negligence, but also for “fraud or bad faith on the part of Pfizer itself.”

Pfizer responded to the Die Welt reporter by asserting that, “Regulatory authorities around the world have approved our Covid-19 vaccine. These approvals are based on a robust and independent assessment of the scientific data on quality, safety, and efficacy, including the phase 3 clinical trial.” Sure, authorities guaranteed the company endless funding, marketing, mandates, and indemnity so that Pfizer would have no incentive to even release the true results of its trial, much less make the product better.

How can this continue to go on after all we know?

Yet in all honesty, this year’s legislative sessions in red states have been an utter disgrace – with medical freedom not even being on the back burner of policy issues. The few brave legislators who seek to impose some sort of accountability on the state departments of health for promoting and mandating these shots are summarily shouted down. Florida is the only state where officials are holding Pfizer accountable with the convening of a grand jury. Just last week, the Florida Department of Health sent an alert to doctors warning them to inform anyone inquiring about the COVID shots about the adverse events reported to the CDC’s VAERS. Where are the other red states? Why is Ron DeSantis the only governor who values the Nuremberg Code?

What is it going to take to give this issue the prominence it deserves so that the policies and laws reflect the human toll these odious policies have taken on humanity? How many more people need to die for a lie? Remember, a study from Thailand showed that 29% of young males in the study sample suffered some form of subclinical heart damage whether they experienced symptoms or not. We have potentially hundreds of millions of people in the world who are ticking time bombs and in need of the best research, diagnostics, and treatment.

Amid all the existential threats to our security, civilization, culture, and economy – and there are certainly many – can you think of anything that matches the severity of this issue? From died suddenly to plummeting birth rates, how is the vaccine issue not the top concern of all public policy, given that it was injected in 5.5 billion people and officials are on the cusp of approving more mRNAs? So we’re now supposed to believe Moderna’s own published phase 3 trial results of its RSV shot that it’s 84% effective and absolutely no serious adverse events occurred? Within months, if we don’t stop it, this shot will be in the arms of every senior and then, eventually, in the arms of every newborn baby.

After Pfizer purposely fabricated its clinical trial, the company must now be on the hook for a different sort of trial – one Steve Deace and Daniel Horowitz layed out in “Rise of the Fourth Reich.” Unless we begin holding pharma companies accountable and erecting legal firewalls to protect the people from their endless experimentation, they will do this again and again.