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Excellent links, thanks, Ray.

But then, looking through that Real History Channel site, I dunno... You can show me warm and fuzzy pictures of A. Hitler until the cows come home, but I cannot buy into any idea of him as a benevolent person. The man was still a delusional accomplice to mass murder and destruction.

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One's opinion can change after sufficient information can be accessed. You don't have to buy into any ideas, but all the myths around Hitler in popular sources sound a bit too much, too. One has to formulate their own ideas, but preferably after reading up on both sides of history. I personally disagree with slave labor camps, but the US has had those, too, and many American prisons function as such, while about 98% of convictions are due to plea bargains with people who cannot afford a lawyer... And let me not get started with Operation Paperclip or Operation Gladio...

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Jun 28, 2023·edited Jun 28, 2023

I understand what you mean by Operation Paperclip, etc.

What I'm having a hard time with is everything that I know about Hitler and those times from my now deceased grandmother.

Independent of the overabundance of false historical narratives out there, the flattering look at the man just doesn't jive with what my grandmother experienced back then.

And we're not even Jewish.

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I think the point is to balance out the popular view of Hitler as literally Cartoon Satan incarnate with the reality that he was a great man of history. Great Men of History are never "nice men" but they have real rational reasons for doing what they did and that our "Great Men" like Churchill and FDR were also "delusional accomplices to mass murder and destruction" and not the saintly heroes we are told they were and that America and the Allies were the "good guys." Look at Covid with China and the US....are there any "good guys" running things now?

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I see what you mean.

I'd be more inclined to call them "Important Men" of history, or, "Significant Men of Grave Historical Importance."

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Thanks Ray. I was so horrified by what I read from your link that I did a post a called hidden history. Apologies due to you for not citing you as the source of the article.

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WE need to pivot from the Covid19 and attack the Pandemic treaty and the CBDC and the Vaccine passport or covid19 will happen all over again only worse..

Please share this link far and wide and we need links to get people organized against the CBDC and Vaccine Passport..

Share The Below Link

MULTIPLE ACTION ITEMS

AIM TO STOP WHO...

Take Action: USA, UK, Canada,

South Africa, New Zealand, Australia

Actions and Resources (More Countries Too)

https://preventgenocide2030.org/all-actions

MAY WAS #EXITWHO MONTH

BUT WE'RE STILL AT IT!

Special Link for Canada:

https://petitions.ourcommons.ca/en/Petition/Details?Petition=e-4448

Please Note: the Canada Link is to a Government web site. Yes, it's Official! Canada will take up the issue, but we need a strong outpouring of Canadian support.

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 8, 2023Author

While I appreciate the initiative, please, consider the following.

Petitions accomplish two things:

1. They acknowledge a completely illegitimate "leadership" that betrayed the citizen no later then 9/11, but preferably since the Federal Reserve Act of 1913;

2. Complete a list of the non-compliant.

I am gullible, but when was the last time a popular effort like this has EVER worked? There are too many examples for me to quote but here are a few:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/do-not-comply-no-kidding

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Jun 7, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

We all teach ourselves. Now that is a truism for the education system to learn.

True learning happens as a result of being a student to the knowledge we seek.

My Guru Sri Aurobindo once said of education: "Nothing worth learning can be taught, teaching is the individualized act of learning only done by the student."

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That's why access to sources is becoming limited and the official line hardly ever allows for open thinking.

Your guru's statement is intriguing to me, because it raises the question, "To what end one would like to learn?"

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The greatest truth is the one found from within. From an early age, children have a nature curiosity and a craving to learn, I noticed this with my own kids, and encouraged them to learn not just about what things "look like," but to inquire what is actually true of what is being observed. Both of them are impossible to brainwash now, they are a sore headache for the woke teachers at their school.

Just by habit now, they almost always notice what they are presented with; then, their automatic response is to go find all the other things they were being "distracted" from. All throughout their education they have been like this, conversations with them is fun; during the Plandemic, my daughter said every time she watched the covid vax being pushed onto kids by the media, she thought of it as child abuse, she is only 17.

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"The future is a boot, stomping on a human face, forever."

Not sure if it was George Orwell or Aldous Huxley who said it..

Or maybe it was Mao or Stalin or any American President since at least World War I... 🤔

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Orwell, but it doesn't matter.

The question is, how much further can people put up with being humiliated? Wasn't enough for them with the muzzles?

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Based on what I've experienced over the last three years, the stupidity of most of humanity is beyond inexcusable.

At this point about the only person I have much to do with is my wife.. I'm so grateful my work involves sitting in a security kiosk, seeing and talking to, pretty much no-one.

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The stupidity is inexorable, but the level of compliance is beyond belief.

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Jun 7, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

Although fascinating, history is dead and gone. We cannot live in history. How are we to know that any recorded history is accurate? Sure, now we have a gazillion cameras to record every human's breath and farting, but that means squat. Even the great Menegele fauci was recorded as stating this or that and yet still denies ever have said anything.

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

Absolutely, "knowledge is power" only until you and I are outgunned. :)

As Mao observed, "Power lies in the barrel of the gun."

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I can see Marburg coming next, very soon, scaring people into those Walmarts you mention- how theyll get most to comply with one health ID. What do you think Ray?

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Only skimmed through this, but I'm going to read it seriously this morning..

"Marburg: Genocide or Nothingburger?" - Mike Whitney - https://www.unz.com/mwhitney/marburg-genocide-or-nothingburger/

The morons will of course, line up to take their medicine... 🙄

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Unz is occasionally good, but here he is subscribing to viral theory...

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Yes, I've noticed some inexcusable glitches in his narrative. The thing I really wonder, how could even a "Secular Jew" constantly sponsor such extreme "anti-semitism"?

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

My other problem with him is that he is still pushing crypto, which used to be a good investment about three years ago, but these days, it's only skimming the bank accounts of those who are still waiting for a miracle.

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

FedNow will do it in the US, but the same is coordinated in a lot of other countries:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/the-final-stage-to-a-one-world-government

At this point, some greater crisis is needed in order to take people's attention off the Fed. Marburg could work.

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Jun 7, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

Nope. From what I’ve read and heard it’s not another phony virus, not climate nonsense, but the fake alien invasion.

They’ve been planting the seeds.

A little here. A little there.

Even Lone Skum had a piece on it.

They have perfected holograms to the point you would swear what you’re seeing is real.

I’ve read 2025 is their target date.

We’ll see...

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

Yes, predictive programming going back a long way.

All those are options, including WW3 on TV and a few false flags. 5G attacks seem to be the most plausible, because they are easy to activate and control, while imitating a "pandemic," as suggested by Dr. Rashid Buttar (who, otherwise, seems to have gotten just about everything wrong):

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/how-about-dr-rashid-buttar

The showdown is starting in July with the FedNow:

https://rayhorvaththesource.substack.com/p/the-final-stage-to-a-one-world-government

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Jun 7, 2023Liked by Ray Horvath, "The Source" :)

FedNow troubles me.

The new humans will probably rejoice and line up to sign up for that.

I see it as the first step 🙁...

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FedNow is probably the hill on which many will die. I would not make a good slave, but I don't know about others...

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Hey, we got LIV Golf, that "proves" anything is possible with Big Money.

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Exactly...

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deletedJun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023
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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

I am not taking sides, not ever. Still, in Roman Catholicism, original sin (trying to be smarter and better than G*d) is recognized, and the Teaching Office is supposed to straighten out misdirected minds after their "primary socialization," which can be good, because humans are unlikely to be born to know right from wrong; they seem to acquire the concept in their immediate environment before they reach full consciousness around the age of five.

The question is, "Are there any divine instructions regarding right from wrong?"

That question opens up many cans of worms.

Logically, without divine guidance, humans can never access the forces of Eternity. Yet out of the many claim that they have, and I'm having a hard time to believe any of them.

It's not about dogma. It's about the Truth. As all my readers must have noticed by now, every single one of us have a certain (changing) perception of the Truth (which does NOT make it "relative"), and ones I've judged before became friends and ones I thought were friends didn't exactly stay allies (I don't keep account of "enemies," because the list might be too long and I might misidentify them, anyway).

In my experience, it all boils down to personal experience. Sometimes, that can involve having been contacted by the core of "humanity," but most of the time, it remains a mystery, which is what life is.

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"What do you get, when you multiphy six time nine?" 🤔😘

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Never thought about that question. :)

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"I always thought something was fundamentally wrong with The Universe..."

-- Arthur Dent

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Jun 7, 2023·edited Jun 7, 2023Author

Thank you for your appreciation. As exhausting as my job is, it always gives me a boost (not a "booster" :) ) to learn that I'm not doing all this in vain.

Okay, here is about my schooling, perhaps for fun, perhaps for some background about me that would make my pieces easier to relate to.

Oh, dear. Me, as a half-Jewish boy (I found out about that only about 15 years ago, but I've written an article about it, "Who Is Jewish?"), also received "world-class" Roman Catholic "education" in a poor part of town. My parents were not religious (with my father being an atheist and a mother "who didn't want to confuse me" and wanted to leave up the rest to me, G*d rest her soul), it was good for me, because it kept me on my toes, and I had to read a lot of things that I would not have never encountered otherwise. A few priests were nice, most of them were terrible teachers, and a few were abominably nasty (no, I was not s*lly molested, but they made up for that otherwise).

I was nine, when we got our first TV, and it was still B&W with slow programming that gave me time to think, while watching. I remember "Twelve Angry Men" being the first (and nearly the last ) shocking movie that I saw on TV. Later, it didn't take long for me to realize that everything was manipulative, school included, but it also made me pay attention to the way it was done. For several decades, I have been able to smell baloney from a thousand miles (well, occasionally, I might be overdoing it, but I keep my opinion open), and as for TV, I couldn't watch it for more than 10-15 seconds a year. :)

I was "luckier" than you with my grades; the good "fathers" never failed me, only kept giving me Cs and Ds even after I recited their books verbatim (I considered that a challenge, wanted to improve my memory, and it usually took me only two readings to remember, so my laziness meter was also satisfied), so we didn't part as best friends, although there were a few who never hurt me and the best teacher I've ever seen (and emulated during my academic career) was one of them, who, incidentally taught me elective Russian (I was interested, it didn't take any effort, because for some reason, the language stuck on the like dirt, and I also learned to respect the culture; I can still use my Russian to a certain extent). In fact, the way I am making sure everything is fair on my site comes from his method.

One of his principles was that he was not teaching; we all teach ourselves. All a teacher can do is create an environment in which the process is easier and more efficient. Apparently, you haven't failed that form of self-education! :)

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I've never even ever understood the concept of "team work," because it's obviously only about compartmentalization of knowledge and lifting the burden of personal responsibility. One intelligent person can solve the same problem a lot faster and better than a group where the same person is present. Smart people don't care to argue with morons, after all.

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