Saturday, May 2, 2026

ANDREW BRIDGEN: The year is 1972. Your doctor prescribes Valium. Britain is in the grip of a benzodiazepine wave that will last two decades.

The year is 1950. Your doctor lights a cigarette and tells you smoking is fine. He read it in a study. He is telling the truth about having read it. He does not know, or is not saying, that the study was funded by the tobacco industry. The year is 1958. Your doctor tells you to eat less fat. The evidence is contested. The contestation is not in the public messaging. The food industry has been helpful in clarifying which findings deserve attention. Some researchers who published contradictory data have been quietly defunded. Ancel Keys is on the cover of Time magazine. The year is 1962. Your doctor prescribes thalidomide to your pregnant wife for morning sickness. It has been approved. The FDA gave it the green light in Europe. Twelve thousand children will be born with severe limb malformations before anyone in an official capacity acknowledges the problem. The families are told the drug was safe. The drug was approved. Both of these things remain true. The year is 1972. Your doctor prescribes Valium. Britain is in the grip of a benzodiazepine wave that will last two decades. The dependency risk is known internally. It is not shared. Your doctor is not lying to you. He was not told either. The year is 1999. Your doctor prescribes Vioxx for your arthritis. It is newer than ibuprofen, well-tolerated, and Merck has a study showing it works. Merck also has internal data suggesting it roughly doubles the risk of heart attack. This data will not reach your doctor for four more years. Fifty thousand people are estimated to have died in the interim. Merck eventually settles for 4.85 billion dollars. No criminal charges are brought. The year is 2002. Your doctor prescribes OxyContin. Purdue Pharma trained its sales representatives to tell doctors the addiction risk was less than one percent. That figure came from a letter, not a study. The letter was about patients with terminal cancer on short-term doses in hospital settings. Your doctor is a GP with a patient who has a bad back. Nobody draws a distinction. Nobody is required to. The year is 2008. Your doctor checks your cholesterol. Your LDL is elevated. You are prescribed a statin. Nobody mentions that the number needed to treat for primary prevention is approximately 250. Nobody mentions that the muscle deterioration you'll notice over the next two years is listed as a rare side effect rather than a documented pattern affecting a meaningful percentage of patients. The trial that informed the prescription was funded by the manufacturer. Now it is today. Your doctor has new guidelines. New studies. New consensus. He is confident. He has always been confident. The confidence has never been the problem. The confidence is, in fact, precisely the problem. Source: COVID19 VACCINE VICTIMS ANDFAMILIES

Friday, May 1, 2026

Gray hair is a sign that your body is protecting itself from cancer

U.S. SECRETARY AGRICULTURE, BROOKE ROLLINS: they have found 500,000 people getting more than one federal welfare benefit illegally and 244,000 dead people receiving benefits in Red states. Democrat-run states are refusing to share data.

North Caroline Has Gone Full Red/Green Alliance

LINUXHIPPIE: This is a Counter-State activity in the Repressive Tolerance Line of Operation. This is what Marxist do to destabilize and demoralize societies they seek to control.

A Critique of Pure Tolerance, 1965.  "Repressive Tolerance," 

They write that the purpose of the book is to discuss the political role of tolerance and that despite their disagreements with each other they believe that "the prevailing theory and practice of tolerance" is hypocritical and conceals "appalling political realities."

Marcuse argues that "the realization of the objective of tolerance" requires "intolerance toward prevailing policies, attitudes, opinions, and the extension of tolerance to policies, attitudes, and opinions which are outlawed or suppressed." He makes the case for "liberating tolerance", which would consist of intolerance to right-wing movements and toleration of left-wing movements.

 

Repression comes in many forms like arrests, violence, or spreading false information.  Despite these hurdles, movements find ways to keep fighting for justice.  They use different strategies that mix ethics and politics to stay strong and visible.  One common approach is changing how they protest.  When public demonstrations become dangerous or impossible, movements switch to underground activities or digital campaigns.  They might organize secret meetings or use social media to share their message safely.

Another key tactic is decentralization.  Instead of having one leader, movements have decision-making across many groups or individuals.  This makes it harder for authorities to shut down the entire movement by targeting just a few leaders.  It also encourages more people to get involved, making the movement more resilient and inclusive.  Building strong organizational skills is also vital.  Movements create support networks, like legal help, mental health resources, and safe spaces.  These help activists stay motivated and protected.  Ethically, this shows that they care about the well-being of everyone involved, not just the cause itself.  Highlighting repression publicly is another powerful tool.  Movements document abuses, like violence and censorship, and share these stories widely.  Social media and independent news outlets help spread the truth quickly.