The Deep State almost always wins. But if Attorney General Barr leans hard on Trump to unfetter investigators, all hell may break lose, says Ray McGovern.
I think of the ET thing in terms of the evolution of the human species – moving toward becoming cosmic citizens/humans with active engagement with our neighbors. It is the inevitable next step in the evolution process with all of the attendant changes in perspective, outlook, capabilities, etc.
There is good reason to believe that we (humans) are on a trajectory that is common, having been executed literally millions of times on other planets, where when at least a small but critical mass of the residents rise to a level of consciousness that they are contacted and embraced by those who seeded and nurtured them in the beginning and then are ushered into becoming cosmic citizens with advice, mentoring, technology, etc.
Chris O'Leary, former 10 years of Active Duty at U.S. Marine Corps (1989-2000)
Phi Beta Iota: A to Z, an absolute worst case indictment of the President, useful as a sanity check for those responsible for assuring he is re-elected. This is a very capable, thoughtful list of 26 reasons — with links and examples — of why 25% of the population is totally hostile to the President and another 25% are concerned. It does not capture the flip side, all the reasons 26% of the population loves the President, while 24% is moderately optemistic about the future of America the Beautiful.
4 Stars – Clearly a Great Deal to Offer But Too Scattered
Reviewed by Robert David Steele
UPDATE: See two videos by Kerry Cassidy below. Author — not book — rises to five stars for authenticity, integrity, and shared knowledge.
Although this book comes very highly recommended, and is one of the “foundation” books for those who claim we have a secret space fleet already in existence and have had anti-gravity propulsion and anti-aging technologies among many others for decades, it is simply not coherent enough, not well-documented enough, and not well-written enough to make it to five stars.
The inability of most generals to adapt, as Allen C. Guelzo writes in “Gettysburg: The Last Invasion,” “makes the Civil War look like an exercise in raw stupidity equivalent to the slaughters on the Western Front [of World War I].”
By focusing on battlefield exploits we too often blot out the suffering of the soldiers, the families that lost sons, brothers and husbands, and the hundreds of thousands of children left without fathers. We ignore the crippling physical and psychological wounds that plague veterans.