Friday, December 12, 2025

BREAKING: President Trump officially pardons Tina Peters.

Will President Trump's pardon actually free Tina Peters?

J. MICHAEL WALLER: The tanker was registered in Panama and flew a Guyana false flag (thus a stateless vessel), owned by Triton Navigation Corp in the Marshall Islands, which is owned by a Singapore…

from J. Michael Waller,

Tanker that US seized off Venezuela is owned by Donetsk-born Ukrainian citizen Viktor Artemov in Switzerland, accused of illicitly shipping fuel for secessionist Donetsk People's Republic Ministry of Defense in Russian-occupied Ukraine.

TRUTH TROLL OFFICIAL: We have created greatness . . . that has mapped the world, created systems & infrastructure that we still use today.

I don't say this lightly: German race produced more original minds than the nonwhite world combined! Invention of the movable-type printing press by Johannes Gutenberg (1440) Johann Joachim Winckelmann, 1717–1768: Pioneer of modern art history and archaeology. Formulation of the laws of planetary motion by Johannes Kepler (1609–1619) Composition of the Brandenburg Concertos by Johann Sebastian Bach (1722) Development of the Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant (1781) Johann Gottlieb Fichte, 1762–1814, Philosopher foundational to German idealism. Johann Gottfried Herder, 1744–1803, Philosopher and critic who influenced Romanticism and cultural nationalism. Werner von Siemens, 1816–1892, Inventor and industrialist, founder of Siemens company. Alexander von Humboldt, 1769–1859. Explorer and naturalist who advanced geography and ecology. Creation of Faust by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1808–1832) Ludwig van Beethoven (1824) One of the top 3 greatest mathematician in Carl Friedrich Gauss (1798) Formulation of dialectical philosophy in Phenomenology of Spirit by Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1807). Collection and publication of fairy tales by the Brothers Grimm (1812), preserving folklore and influencing global storytelling. Carl Zeiss, 1816–1888, Optician who founded Zeiss company for precision instruments. Military strategy outlined in On War by Carl von Clausewitz (1832), defining modern warfare theory. Development of non-Euclidean geometry by Bernhard Riemann (1854) Discovery of the cell theory in pathology by Rudolf Virchow (1858) Invention of the telephone prototype by Philipp Reis (1861) Establishment of empirical history methods by Leopold von Ranke (1820s–1880s) Theodor Mommsen, 1817–1903, Historian of ancient Rome, first German Nobel in Literature. Composition of symphonies by Johannes Brahms (1876–1885), epitomizing Romantic music. Invention of the four-stroke engine by Nikolaus Otto (1876). Pioneering human gliding flights by Otto Lilienthal (1891–1896), laying groundwork for aviation. Invention of the diesel engine by Rudolf Diesel (1892). Invention of the automobile by Carl Benz (1885), creating the first practical motor vehicle. Development of the electric dynamo by Werner von Siemens (1866), enabling widespread electrification. Founding of precision optics industry by Carl Zeiss (1846), revolutionizing microscopy and photography. Excavation and discovery of ancient Troy by Heinrich Schliemann (1871–1890), originating archaeology. Composition of the Ring Cycle operas by Richard Wagner (1876). Friedrich Nietzsche (1883–1885) Invention of the zeppelin airship by Ferdinand von Zeppelin (1900), advancing aerial travel. Formulation of quantum theory by Max Planck (1900) Gottlob Frege, 1848–1925, founded modern logic. Writing of The Magic Mountain by Thomas Mann (1924) Authoring Siddhartha by Hermann Hesse (1922) Sociological theory in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism by Max Weber (1905). Formulation of the uncertainty principle by Werner Heisenberg (1927), key to quantum mechanics. Development of rocket technology (V-2) by Wernher von Braun (1940s), foundational to space exploration. Engraving masterpieces like Melencolia I by Albrecht Dürer (1514), defining Renaissance art. Romantic landscape paintings by Caspar David Friedrich (1810s–1830s), capturing sublime nature. Founding of the Bauhaus school by Walter Gropius (1919), revolutionizing modern design and architecture. Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1780s–1790s), defining Classical music perfection. Development of the symphony and string quartet forms by Joseph Haydn (18th century), earning him the title "Father of the Symphony." Ferdinand Tönnies, 1855–1936, Sociologist who distinguished Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft. Creation of lieder and symphonies like the Unfinished by Franz Schubert (early 19th century), pioneering Romantic emotional expression. Waltzes like The Blue Danube by Johann Strauss II (1867), embodying Viennese light music and cultural identity. Massive symphonies and choral works by Anton Bruckner (late 19th century), influencing orchestral scale and spirituality. Erwin Schrödinger (1935), co-founder of quantum physics. Max Planck, 1858–1947, co-founder of quantum theory. Development of statistical mechanics by Ludwig Boltzmann (1870s), explaining thermodynamics microscopically. Philosophical calculus and monadology in Monadology by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1714) Ontology of the Ungrund as the abyssal, groundless non-being at the heart of God and nature by Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling (1797). David Hilbert, 1862–1943, Mathematician who formulated the 23 unsolved problems. The World as Will and Representation by Arthur Schopenhauer (1818). Being and Time by Martin Heidegger (1927) Development of X-rays by Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen (1895) Organic chemistry advancements by Justus von Liebig (1830s). Electrical resistance law by Georg Ohm (1827), foundational to circuit theory. Temperature scale invention by Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit (1724), standardizing thermometry. Pioneering ethology and imprinting studies by Konrad Lorenz (1930s–1970s), co-winning a Nobel for animal behavior insights. Carl Gustav Jung, 1875–1961. Oswald Spengler, 1880–1936, Historian and philosopher, author of The Decline of the West. Vienna Secession movement and paintings like The Kiss by Gustav Klimt (early 20th century), defining Art Nouveau.  

Kurt Gödel, 1906–1978, incompleteness theorems. 

"The Ethics of Killing All White Babies"

Weather Underground?  So this must have been what year, 1969?  Wikipedia says that the Weather Underground WAS an American revolutionary left-wing Marxist group (I hate to see what a right wing Marxist group is) active from 1969-1977. 

These clips are from the 2002 documentary, The Weather Underground. Watch it here.

The Weather Underground was an American left-wing Marxist militant organization first active in 1969, founded on the Ann Arbor campus of the University of Michigan. Originally known as the Weathermen, or simply Weatherman, the group was organized as a faction of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) national leadership. Officially known as the Weather Underground Organization (WUO) beginning in 1970, the group's express political goal was to create a revolutionary party to overthrow the United States government, which WUO believed to be imperialist

If their mission was to overthrow imperialism, why would they target and assassinate local police officers and security guard

The Weather Underground bombed the Pentagon?  Yep, 1972.  

On May 19, 1972, Ho Chi Minh's birthday, the Weather Underground placed a bomb in the women's bathroom in the Air Force wing of the Pentagon. The damage caused flooding that destroyed computer tapes holding classified information. Other radical groups worldwide applauded the bombing, illustrated by German youths protesting against American military systems in Frankfurt.This was "in retaliation for the U.S. bombing raid in Hanoi." 

I don't think that Americans fully understand what they're up against.  

One of Cuomo’s last acts as Governor was to grant clemency to David Gilbert, a Weather Underground terrorist who was convicted of murdering two police officers and a security guard.

Gilbert was convicted in the 1981 murder of Nyack Police Sgt. Edward O’Grady, Officer Waverly Brown and Brink’s guard Peter Paige.

Gilbert is also the father of San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin. Boudin's mother is also a convicted terrorist, Kathy Boudin.

No doubt that Chesa Boudin used his vast Democrat connections to lobby for the likely release of his dad.

Gilbert was serving a sentence of 75 years to life in prison with no possibility of parole until 2056. 

From "Cuomo Commutes the Murder Sentence of Weather Underground Terrorist," Chad Nakanishi, KTRH Radio, August 24, 2021.

SAMA HOOLE: Anglo-Saxon peasants raise the animals using Anglo-Saxon words: cow, pig, sheep, deer. When slaughtered, it becomes Norman French: beef, pork, mutton, venison. These are the words for food

1066, England. The Normans don't just take the throne. They take the language of meat itself. Anglo-Saxon peasants raise the animals using Anglo-Saxon words: cow, pig, sheep, deer. These are the words for labour. For watching something grow that you'll never eat. When slaughtered, it becomes Norman French: beef, pork, mutton, venison. These are the words for food. For the nobleman's table. The peasant who raised the cow for three years calls it "cow" until a Norman lord's servant leads it away. Then it becomes "boeuf." A word the peasant might never speak because he'll never eat it. This isn't accidental language mixing. It's a perfect record of who does the work and who reaps the reward. The Anglo-Saxon raises it. The Norman eats it. A peasant family tends their pigs for a year. When the lord's men collect the tax pig, it becomes "porc." It crosses a linguistic barrier the moment it crosses the class barrier. The family keeps perhaps one pig yearly, smoked and rationed across months. The lord eats pork three times per week. This dual vocabulary persists for 800 years. Eight centuries of reminding the English peasant that the animal is yours to raise but the meat belongs to someone else. You work with cows. They eat beef. You tend pigs. They dine on pork. The Anglo-Saxon language has words for the animals but French has words for the food because Anglo-Saxons weren't allowed to think of animals as food. Their role was maintenance. Feeding. Breeding. Slaughter when commanded. Then hand it over and watch it disappear. Modern nutritionists telling working people to eat more plants and less meat aren't innovating. They're continuing an 800-year tradition of convincing the masses that meat isn't for them. The vocabulary changed but the message is the same: know your place, stick to grain, leave the protein for your betters. Your ancestors weren't allowed to eat the cow they raised. You're told beef will raise your cholesterol.

Different justification. Same result. The people doing the work don't get the meat.