Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Tech companies' hiring trends not exactly reflecting strong dynamics

Monday, August 29, 2022

Rosalind Peterson addresses United Nations in 2007 on chemtrails

Rosalind Peterson at the United Nations, 2007.

It's not just about the noxious chemicals that are found in the chemtrails, the lattice formations that hang in the sky diminish sun exposure to Earth and disrupt photosynthesis.  

A lot of the discussion about chemtrails revolves around mitigation of climate change, a rather ill-defined term at this time.  I'll say.  And so many times we're talking about putting chemicals, like sulfur, or particulates into the atmosphere in what they call geo-engineering schemes to reduce . . . and to help the planet not go through a tremendous climate change to mitigate global warming.  However, the incidents of putting chemicals into our atmosphere is going to change and impact agricultural crop production. And if you take and put up into our skies, chemicals, the amount of sunlight reaching the earth you are going to begin to reduce crop production.  Studies at the University of Illinois on corn crop production show reduction.  Without the process of photosynthesis, whereby plants from direct energy with the sun find the energy to grow, we're going to find ourselves if we mitigate in that direction impacting crop production not only here in the United States but worldwide.  One of the things that is impacting crop production right now in the United States is reducing photosynthesis and impacting the ability of solar-powered panels to generate the power that they should is precipitate contrails.  

Here is the full presentation given at the UN in 2007.  She founded the Agriculture Defense Coalition in 2006.  

Wait, didn't he win a prize for peace or something?

Two Brits living in Canada are taking tyrannical leader Justin Trudeau to court over his unscientific travel mandates

Nanoparticles without the mRNA inside, honed on the rats' ovaries to a very significant degree

From Canadian doctor, Dr. Hodkinson,

Baby girls are born with all the eggs they're ever going to have when they are born.  They're not going to make anymore.  There's about a million or so.  And so each one of those ova is incredibly precious.  So there could be an inflammatory attack going on against the ovary of a developing female fetus because we also know that Nanoparticles are well-known to pass through what we call the placental barrier, the thing that keeps the baby safe from all kinds of noxious things.  So these nanoparticles from the clot shots that are known to be inflammatory, that are known to concentrate in rat ovaries but not studied in humans conveniently, despite knowing that those nanoparticles are known to be inflammatory, are getting through the placenta and could be, again not studied, could be attacking the ovaries of the developing female fetus.  Translation: this may not simply be an effect on fertility; it could be causing infertility that only manifests 20 years later when that little girl becomes of reproductive age. This is the stuff . . . this is the stuff of things still not studied . . .