CNN's New Psyop for Somalia

I’ve been thinking about what to write about this for a couple of days, since reading Benedict Omollo’s post about it. I was immediately struck with an impression that CNN’s sudden interest in Somalia indicates a renewed effort by the corporate world order to savage that population in the wake of the initial success of orgonite in Mogadishu.

I think the key is their use of the phrase ‘failing state,’ because until then Somalia has been referred to as a ‘failed state.’ [Image Can Not Be Found] As our friends are demonstrating in many East African countries, prosperity and peace doesn’t depend on a national government any more. National governments will find that they’re being challenged to keep out of the way of prosperity, rather. Pretty soon national governments will become as weak as local governments now are or else they’ll just be discarded.

When Carol and I gifted Atlanta in the spring of 03 we worked with a sound engineer who was employed in the bowels of CNN’s hive tower, er, I mean headquarters building. He told me that he remembered when the CIA took it over in 99 because the place was suddenly swarming with guys in expensive suits who were supposed to be referred to as ‘lawyers’ but were/are in fact censors and disinformants. These parasites only work during the day, by the way, so if you expect to get any genuine, unregurgitated news from CNN or any other news outlet you’ll have to do it in the middle of the night when the liars and their ‘anchors’ aren’t around [Image Can Not Be Found]

I track the progress of our African associates pretty closely and I’ve marveled at their natal ability to conduct an expanding and successful international business with almost no capital and no discernible organizational structure–in other words, exactly how I’d do it. On top of that, they’re succeeding in spite of regular attempts by the corporate world order to impoverish them with arrests, funeral costs, poisonings, floods, thefts, etc.

Having established a good reputation for themselves I felt that it’s time for them to get some capital, especially since Somalia is on the verge of being another showcase for what orgonite/mbolea can do to restore peace and prosperity to a ravaged land, as is now happening in the new African republic, South Sudan. Christine Oginye Anyango, who was a delegate to Khartoum for the successful secession negotiations last year, was a refugee in Kenya (when we first started corresponding five years ago) due to the CIA/MI6-sponsored mass murder campaign (like the failing Al Shabaab in Somalia) in Southern Sudan at the time. Those terrorists had been driven from Northern Uganda a couple of years before, thanks to the Uganda Army and some strategic gifting, including Doc Batiibwe’s and my initial ground campaign in early 2004, then Doc Kayiwa’s helicopter-gifting sorties after that, complements of the Uganda Army. Orgonite, vigorously distributed by our friends whom you know, later drove those corporate terrorists and mass murderers out of adjoining Southern Sudan, brought regular rainfall and got independence for the region. Unfortunately, Salva Kirr, Christine’s dear husband, was killed with poison in the process of that campaign.

I sometimes use the term, ‘grid willing,’ as a joke but I really do believe that our own hopes, wishes, plans, intentions and dreams are only ever appropriate if they’re in line with the will of God. For the sake of agnostics, I might say ‘the unseen finer realm.’ Orgonite has shown enough of us that the unseen realm is more significant and a lot ‘cleaner’ than the 3D one, after all. I loathe the idea of foisting my personal ideology onto anyone else because that would make me just like the bornagain chumps and zionists (you know: the Jihad) who are numbly enabling the corporate world order’s pillaging and burning campaigns. Faith is always a personal matter and ideas that are timely have a way of becoming universally adopted, anyway. For instance, part of my ideology is freedom from prejudice and without anyone browbeating or preaching that we’re finding that people are generally abandoning old prejudices, such as race, gender, religious, national, educational and economic ones. Another one of mine is that clergy are obsolete because we need to examine reality independently and it’s easy to see that people are just coming to that realization on their own.

The Africans have demonstrated their integrity well enough that I felt it was time for them to have some serious capital (twenty grand would probably be enough–petty cash for some good folks) for their unobtrusive seizure of Somalia from the stranglehold of the corporate world order. I think that CNN’s current, desperate campaign indicates the failure of the corporate effort to prevent peace and prosperity in that land. By the way, if the media are no longer reporting about piracy off the Somali coast we should assume that the piracy has abruptly stopped, due to the initial orgonite/mbolea distribution campaign. When Carol, Jeff and I obliterated the hurricane agenda in the Southeast US, five years ago, the media simply stopped predicting more and worse hurricanes, for instance.

The profit margin of their orgonite sales is too small to finance that effort sufficiently. It was relatively easy for them to take care of South Sudan because the corporate world order wasn’t spending as much effort to destroy those people. I wonder if The Dragon Necropolis Under London is mainly sore at the Somalians for never having accepted colonization. You may have noticed in school that the more independent-thinking and speaking children are heavily penalized and made examples to the rest in order to keep them ‘on track’ toward careers as corporate drones. I imagine this also works on a global level, at least for now while the corporate world order is still vamping our planet.

I felt some anxiety and urgency about inspiring some rich reader of EW to fund that project right now but the ‘grid willing’ aspect kicked in later in the day and I’ve been mulling that over. Mrs Odondi sent a load of orgonite to the Somalia border but it may be that it was stolen–I’m checking with Mrs O about that, now. Even that may be another indicator that orgonite severely threatens the hegemony of the corporate terrorists in Somalia.

Since the orgonite that Mrs O and Benedict took to Somalia a few months ago immediately caused rain in that small area the farmers are already growing good crops (it’s still raining regularly and the place was almost a desert, before) and that means the economy is going to bounce back, the way it’s done in other arid regions of East Africa where orgonite has been distributed.

‘Muslim’ means ‘he who submits [to the will of God]’ and I’m not a Muslim but I am always keen to consider God’s will over my own in order to have an ultimately more pleasant and useful life and to aspire to personal integrity. I honestly can’t know God’s Mind so I don’t second guess what is ultimately appropriate in any situation; I rather just wait for my cues and trust them. I trust that if someone reading this has the means and wants to send Mrs O a pile of money to fix Somalia then it’s going to succeed and if it’s not time for that, yet, then our friends will succeed in another way. As you can see, they’re the most committed, resourceful and self-sacrificing orgonite-flingers on the planet at the moment and they’ve quietly started a prairie fire of rising awareness and hope in East Africa. We should all be so fortunate.

In regard to this curious Somalia situation another thing that I was taught in my youth has kept popping up: the Persian saying that, ‘Not everything a man knows can be spoken; not everything that can be spoken can be regarded as timely and not every timely utterance is suited to the capacity of his hearers.’ I know that orgonite can quickly turn Sudan into a prosperous and peaceful country and that this will help expose and obliterate the corporate world order even faster. Maybe Somalia is the key to their fast demise. My knowing that won’t make it happen and my telling it won’t necessarily capture anyone’s imagination and I’m okay with all that. As the Germans used to say, ‘God’s time is the best time.’

One way and another orgonite is undermining the corporate world order at an accelerating rate and it’s happening in a deliciously unorganized but well-orchestrated way, mostly accomplished by people who never tell about it. I think that each one of us are privileged to take part in this peaceful but unstoppable global revolution. I won’t resort to guiltmongering or to browbeating our readers and it’s been clear that the effort in Africa is not a charity, though our African friends are eminently charitable in their efforts to raise Somalia, Congo, Ethiopia, Chad, Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, Tanzania and beyond up to the eventual status of exemplary cultures.

My big brother, Jim, lent me a book about Thomas Paine, most of which I’ve read. I had always written Paine off as an hypocrite because I thought he just talked about revolution, then retired to Britain after that but my thinking about him was conditioned by lies and disinformation. The reason for the disinfo campaign, which started before he died, was that he had enraged the noisy clergy, the slave owners, the nascent cartels and their directors, the corporate (London) world order with his book, The Age of Reason.

Paine, who was a corset maker by profession, then a newspaper editor when he came to America, actually fought in the American Revolution, was close to the more self-sacrificing founding fathers, and then went to England to foment revolution, there. His pamphlet, Common Sense, written only a few months before the Declaration of Independence (directly inspired by his writings) was signed, was solely responsible for moving the Americans sufficiently toward the notion of independence from Britain. Franklin had personally recruited Paine in London a few months before that. He narrowly escaped to France and the Brits put out a contract on him. After the French Revolution he was elected to the French parliament but his personal integrity soon landed him in prison, of course (the French revolution was a Brit project, after all). He narrowly escaped execution and Ambassador Monroe’s wife sheltered him in the American embassy. Jefferson wanted to bring him back to America on a warship but he declined and made his way home on a merchant vessel, at tremendous risk since the Brits had (have) spies everywhere.

I mention Paine because I’ve always been irritated at the way ‘globalism’ has been profaned by the corporate world order. I’ve always considered myself a world citizen and my main allegiance is to the planet, not to a country. Every time I encounter someone who loves his country more than his species I feel a little confused and disappointed that he/she still keeps that archaic notion alive. My parents’ generation, ‘The Depression Babies’ were the enablers of the post-WWII establishment of NationalSocialism/communism throughout the West and they were total chumps for all those ‘my country, right or wrong’ slaughter campaigns that were necessary for the obliteration of what remained of national sovereignty in the world. So, when I read that Paine called himself a ‘world citizen’ and that he considered that the only threat to world peace was Great Britain I felt enormously vindicated. He knew and expressed that every other country in the world except Great Britain preferred trading to conquest. It’s still true. Even China is operating under the mandate that global trade is necessary to increase a billion Chinese people’s prosperity and contentment. The commies at the top no doubt hope to stay on top by ensuring that those billion will credit them with having a nice life for the first time in millenia [Image Can Not Be Found]

I almost feel sorry for Mao Tse Tung’s ideological progeny because orgonite is going to blow them out of the water, pretty soon, heheh, and then the Chinese people will become more prosperous than they can currently imagine.

Paine and others were in the process of building nations; we’re in the process of returning real political and economic power to localities, which is the only level of government where full accountability is possible. In places like Africa, India, Central America and a few other areas there has never been enough infrastructure to enable a powerful national government so people just take care of business on their own, usually in a democratic fashion since it’s human nature to interact that way. Can you see how they’re already a giant step ahead of the West? Just about the entire world is literate, now, by the way. In Paine’s day the most literate country in the world was America, which is why his single pamphlet was read by just about everyone in a short time prior to July, 1776. On top of that, we’ve all got the internet, even in remote African villages.

Over here, people I know mostly disdain even local government beause the corporate world order has made sure that only scoundrels will have power at all levels of government. Take away the corporate world order and the scoundrels stand fully exposed. Also, without that parasitic infrastructure each one of us will be accountable for choosing our own leaders for the first time in a very, very long time. Since most power will be local in that case we’ll have to trust that people of conscience (always the minority) will finally stop muzzling themselves.

See how it all ties together?

~Don

Haha, CNN probably wants us to think they’re helping ‘drowning Somalia’ by throwing that country some ‘news anchors’ [Image Can Not Be Found]

~Don