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Quenelle - Golden

Best of the Web: Jordan Peterson: 'Open the damn country back up, before Canadians wreck something we can't fix'

closed business
© Justin Tang/The Canadian PressWe are pushing the complex systems upon which we depend and which are miraculously effective and efficient in their often thankless operation to their breaking point, writes Jordan Peterson.
The country is growing more authoritarian in response to fear.

I spent more than three hours on the phone this weekend trying to get through to the online security department of one of Canada's major banks. One of my accounts was shut down (because I had the effrontery to sign in from Alberta โ€” an event too unexpected for the bank's security systems). I was placed on hold interminably, subjected all the while to the corporate world's idea of music (to soothe me). I was then offered a call-back, which I duly received, 45 minutes later. Then I was placed on hold again, and again, and again. This all occurred after my patience had already been exhausted in the aftermath of trying to fly in Canada.

Like so many Canadians, I have been unable to see many of the people I love and who are tolerant enough to return the sentiment for nearly two years. Lockdowns. Restrictions. Limits on personal and social gatherings. Precautions. Precautions. Precautions.

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Heart - Black

Best of the Web: Vaccine mandate takes effect as 'worst fire in modern times' tears through NYC apartment block, 19 dead, including 9 children

bronx fire
© Scott Heins/Getty ImagesAt least 19 dead, including 9 children, after dozens injured in NYC fire: Officials
PHOTO: Broken windows and charred bricks mark the exterior of a 19-story residential building after a fire erupted in the morning, Jan. 9, 2022, in the Bronx, New York City.
At least 19 people are dead, including nine children, following a massive fire in New York City on Sunday, officials said.

More than 200 firefighters responded to the scene of the five-alarm fire that originated Sunday morning in a duplex apartment on the third floor of a high-rise building, located in the Tremont section of the Bronx, officials said. More than 60 people were injured in the fire, according to the New York City Fire Department.

Approximately 13 people are in Bronx hospitals with life-threatening injuries, officials said.

Comment: One wonders of course whether the death toll would be so high if the vaxx mandates hadn't been enforced. The NYFD union warned this would happen...


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Blue Pill

Best of the Web: You know the global elites are triggered when the propaganda institutions collaborate to refute 'mass formation psychosis'

mass formation psychosis headline
Well, butter my buns and call me a biscuit... if this ain't the biggest revealing tell in years.

Apparently Big Tech and big propaganda media, Reuters and the Associated Press, have joined together to refute the concept of "Mass Formation Psychosis", and pushed their collective narrative into the narrative engineering system.

The Associated Press - SEE HERE and Reuters - SEE HERE, quickly rush to the "fact check" typeset to stop people from recognizing what is most likely the cause of their own psychosis. In a world where things are no longer shocking, this is, well, a little shocking, in a weird and seemingly Orwellian kind of way.

Comment: Is it irony that the very people who are suffering mass formation psychosis are vigorously claiming it doesn't exist? Or is it the Matrix desperately trying to keep the blue-pilled population from recognizing the spell they're under?

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Black Cat

Best of the Web: Breaking the Spell: MindSpace, Trance Warfare, and Neuro Linguistic Programming

brain circuits nlp brainwashing artificial intelligence
"Although this science will be diligently studied, it will be rigidly confined to the governing class. The populace will not be allowed to know how its convictions were generated. When the technique has been perfected, every government that has been in charge of education for a generation will be able to control its subjects securely without the need of armies or policemen.

Bertrand Russell
- The Impact of Science on Society (1951)
This article is for anyone who has found themselves frustrated as they tried to speak with family members, friends, co-workers, or complete strangers about the official covid-19 narrative and pandemic response, only to find any kind of rational discussion nearly impossible. This article is for those who have raised concerns over the totalitarian power grab by governments, only to find a significant portion of people "spellbound," with their stories and identities "reframed" to fit the narrative.

From collective sacrifices for the common good being ritualized in the form of "Zoom calls" among atomized individuals and families kept apart by "lockdowns" to the artfully vague and constantly shifting messaging around "stopping the spread" of a virus with a 99% survival rate, this article will demonstrate the attempts to "reframe" humanity using a new form of mass hypnosis. It will demonstrate how common-sense thinking has come to be seen as morbidly eccentric due to the fact that a significant portion of the population has been reprogrammed using a series of trance-inducing public messaging "incantations." Above all, this article will seek to demonstrate how the spells cast over the last two years may be finally broken and the incantations reversed.

Snowflake Cold

Best of the Web: At least 22 dead as heavy snow traps THOUSANDS of vehicles in Pakistan - 4 FEET of snowfall overnight

People walk past vehicles trapped in heavy snow in Murree
People walk past vehicles trapped in heavy snow in Murree
Thousands affected at popular destination of Murree with eight of those killed from same family

Atiq Ahmed, an Islamabad police officer, said eight of the 22 fatalities were from the family of fellow Islamabad police officer Naveed Iqbal, who also died. All 16 died of hypothermia, officials said.

Rescue services physician Abdur Rehman said that after evacuating all of the stranded tourists from their cars, the death toll stood at 22, including 10 men, 10 children and two women.

The interior minister, sheikh Rashid Ahmed, said thousands of vehicles had been pulled from the snow but more than a thousand were still stuck in the area on Saturday.



Toys

Best of the Web: Babies born during pandemic's first year score slightly lower on a developmental screening test

baby newborn
Columbia researchers found that babies born during the pandemic's first year scored lower on a developmental screening test of social and motor skills at 6 months -- regardless of whether their mothers had COVID during pregnancy -- compared to babies born just before the pandemic.

The study, which included 255 babies born at a NewYork-Presbyterian's Morgan Stanley Children's Hospital and Allen Hospital between March and December 2020, was published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

"Infants born to mothers who have viral infections during pregnancy have a higher risk of neurodevelopmental deficits, so we thought we would find some changes in the neurodevelopment of babies whose mothers had COVID during pregnancy," says Dani Dumitriu, MD, PhD, assistant professor of pediatrics and psychiatry at Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons and lead investigator of the study.

Yoda

Best of the Web: Detained tennis star Novak Djokovic breaks silence over Australia visa row

Novak Djokovic
© This is the Coast UKTennis ace Novak Djokovic detained in quarantine facility in Melbourne.
Novak Djokovic has broken his silence over his ongoing Australian visa row to thank his fans for their support.

The world number one was detained on Thursday after he was denied a visa to enter the country for this month's Australian Open.

He remains detained in Melbourne as he appeals against the decision and while holed up at an immigration facility in the city took to social media for the first time since.

"Thank you to people around the world for your continuous support," he wrote on Instagram. "I can feel it and it is greatly appreciated."

Djokovic has been detained since Thursday morning after his visa was cancelled following scrutiny of the medical exemption over the Covid vaccine he had secured to enter the country.

Comment:


Chess

Best of the Web: Steppe on Fire: Kazakhstan's color revolution

kazakhstan
© Strategic Culture
Maidan in Almaty? Oh yeah. But it's complicated.

So is that much fear and loathing all about gas? Not really.

Kazakhstan was rocked into chaos virtually overnight, in principle, because of the doubling of prices for liquefied gas, which reached the (Russian) equivalent of 20 rubles per liter (compare it to an average of 30 rubles in Russia itself).

That was the spark for nationwide protests spanning every latitude from top business hub Almaty to the Caspian Sea ports of Aktau and Atyrau and even the capital Nur-Sultan, formerly Astana.

The central government was forced to roll back the gas price to the equivalent of 8 rubles a liter. Yet that only prompted the next stage of the protests, demanding lower food prices, an end of the vaccination campaign, a lower retirement age for mothers with many children and - last but not least - regime change, complete with its own slogan: Shal, ket! ("Down with the old man.")

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Cloud Lightning

Best of the Web: Forecast 2022 โ€” Dumpster Fire Blazing on the Frontier of a Dark Age

dumpster fire
If 2021 was the year of maximum corruption, political decadence, and mind-fuckery in US history, 2022 is looking like a convulsive snap-back to the harrowing rigors of reality, spiked with shocking losses, reckonings, and not a little retribution for the rogues and reprobates who drove our country into a ditch. Quandaries abound now in the wreckage of economy, culture, and polity. The years of anything-goes-and-nothing-matters have ended โ€” though you might not know it yet, at this very advent of Twenty-Double-Deuce. Welcome to the banquet of consequences. Soup's on!

The American people have been played backwards and forwards, inside and out, through and through, and up and down; driven to the very edge of national suicide by a combine of enemies within and without. If China's CCP wanted to take maximum advantage of a weakened, confused USA, they couldn't have found more zealous help-mates than the seditious Democratic Party, along with Dr. Anthony Fauci's treasonous public health empire, the murderous pharmaceutical companies, the recklessly dishonest news media, and a demonic host of federal agencies, especially the three-stooge "Intel Community" โ€” the CIA (Moe), DOJ (Larry), FBI (Curley) โ€” plus the many secret horror chambers in the Pentagon. Throw in the Big Tech tyrants, the Marxist mandarins on campus, and the satanic narcissists of Hollywood. Oh, and let's not forget the evil principality of grift and swindling that is Wall Street.

Magnify

Best of the Web: Kazakhstan government resigns amid rare outbreak of protests over rising fuel prices, CSTO deploys peacekeepers citing "outside interference" - UPDATES

protest kazakhstan
Kazakhstan's president has accepted the resignation of the government, hours after he declared a state of emergency in large parts of the country in response to a rare outbreak of unrest.

Kassym-Jomart Tokayev has appointed Alikhan Smailov as acting prime minister, the president's office said early on Wednesday. Smailov was previously the first deputy prime minister.

The political moves follow protests, sparked by rising fuel prices, that began in the west of the country over the weekend and have spread quickly.

Comment: Whilst a dire economic outlook has been looming over much of the planet for years now, 21+ months of lockdowns have certainly made the situation many times worse. In just the the last few weeks Morrocco and Sri Lanka declared that they're teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.

However, this sudden and unusual outbreak of protests in Kazakhstan has led some commentators to speculate whether other forces have played a part in setting off the spark amidst an already discontented population, colour revolution style, given Kazakhstan's relationship and extensive border with Russia, and its strategic role in China's BRI.

Kazakhstan
© YandexKazakhstan on a map
Meanwhile it seems that similar forces are at work over in Turkey, that already fought off a Western-backed coup attempt in 2016, and which is now struggling to contain hyperinflation.

Below is some coverage of the ongoing protests from Twitter; beginning last night, Tuesday 4th January, through to today:








"Protesters arrested soldiers and seized their equipment in Aktau at #Kazakhstan ."




UPDATES: 6th January 11:20 CET

Kazakhstan's Presidential palace is set on fire, and the mayor's office in Almaty is stormed by 'demonstrators':
The building has fallen into the hands of the demonstrators, local media reported, adding that gunshots were heard outside the compound.

Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev wasn't present, however, as he's currently working from the country's capital, Nur-Sultan.

The building in question is known as the 'old residence', as the head of state was based there before the Kazakh capital was moved to Nur-Sultan (formerly known as Astana) in 1997. However, the compound, located in the government district, maintains its official status.


Earlier on Wednesday, the mob made its way into the mayor's office and several other government buildings in the city, which is home to two million people. Clashes have been taking place in various parts of Almaty, with reports of some protesters using firearms against the military and police.

The authorities have again addressed the public, claiming that Almaty has "come under new attacks by extremists and radicals." They called upon those who had taken to the streets to disperse, insisting that their "main goal was to avoid further escalation of violence."

The dramatic events in the second city prompted authorities in the capital to declare a state of emergency on Wednesday. Tensions have also been running high in other areas of the country.

A standoff between police and demonstrators is ongoing, as of Wednesday afternoon, outside the mayor's office in the western city of Aktobe. There were reports that the building had been taken over by the crowd, but law enforcement has since regained control.

In Aktaum on the Caspian Sea, an angry mob was filmed capturing a military truck that had been transporting servicemen. In the clip, a group of men with large sticks were seen ordering the soldiers out of the vehicle and making them kneel in the sand. Judging by the footage, some of the troops were later beaten up.


Kazakhstan has been engulfed in protests since the New Year after the cost of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) doubled in the resource-rich country in a matter of just days.

The hike came because of a reform which saw the trade in LPG transitioning to an electronic platform. The Kazakh government had previously said it couldn't maintain the longtime fuel price caps anymore, as the policy forced producers to operate at a deficit.

But the people were not swayed by those arguments, taking to the streets in large numbers in Nur-Sultan, Almaty, and elsewhere.

Tuesday night was especially heated in Almaty, with widespread clashes and dozens of cars being set on fire. The authorities reacted by imposing a state of emergency in the city.
Kazakh's President vows to take a "tough" response to the rioting:
"As the head of state and from now on as the chief of the Security Council, I intend to act as tough as possible," Tokayev stated.
Tokayev
© Getty Images / Kremlin Press OfficeKazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev.
The post was previously held by former president, and the country's long-time leader, Nursultan Nazarbayev.

The president has placed the blame for the ongoing unrest on unnamed "financially motivated plotters." He claimed that the "hooligans" storming administrative buildings were "highly organized." The violence has already left multiple law enforcement officers injured or dead, Tokayev added.
Not only was there a nationwide internet shut down by Kazakhstan's government, but RT reports that even power supplies to news stations was cut off. This might be because there were reports of 'protestors' breaking into TV stations, and it's likely that the power was cut in an attempt to prevent any possible TV broadcasts that would incite further rioting:
NetBlocks, a British organization that monitors internet freedom, has described the situation in the country as "a nation-scale internet blackout."

"The incident is likely to severely limit coverage of escalating anti-government protests," the outfit pointed out.


RT's attempts to access some Kazakhstan's most prominent news websites have been fruitless amid reports of the blackout.

TV broadcasting has also been disrupted in the country. The KTK channel said it went off the air on Wednesday because the electricity to its headquarters had been cut off. NTK and Channel One Eurasia have also gone dark.

The same day, protesters broke into the offices of the Mir 24 TV channel in Kazakhstan's largest city, Almaty. The staff had been evacuated in time, but the mob remained inside for around an hour, damaging equipment.

In order to arm themselves, the protesters attacked a firearms store in the city, breaking into its warehouse and taking everything that was inside, according to the staff.
By early evening yesterday, Kazakhstan had declared a nationwide emergency:
The state of emergency vastly expands the powers of the country's police and military, as well as allowing the handing down of heavy penalties, including lengthy prison terms, on those caught breaking the law while it is in place.
kazakhstan car fire
© Getty Images / Anadolu AgencyVehicles are set to fire as protests against rising liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) prices continue in Almaty, Kazakhstan on January 05, 2022.
Footage circulating online shows protesters assaulting police officers and military servicemen, and apparently taking their firearms in the process. Clips of the police firing tear gas grenades and water cannons have also surfaced. Numerous stores, including those selling guns, have reportedly been ransacked, and rioters in Almaty have reportedly been breaking into ATMs. The city's international airport has also been overrun by violent protesters, and its operations are currently suspended.


Soon after, the Kazakh president called on the Russia-led CSTO for help, noting that these "terrorist" groups had begun taking over strategic facilities across the country:
"I believe reaching out to our CSTO partners is appropriate and timely," President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev was quoted as saying by local media late on Wednesday.

Moreover, he said an "intense firefight" between an airborne military unit and the "terrorists" had been going on outside the country's largest city, Almaty, at the time of his address. These highly organized "terrorists" have been trained abroad, Tokayev alleged. He did not provide any evidence to back up this assertion.

"These terrorist gangs are international, have undergone serious training abroad, and their attack on Kazakhstan can and should be viewed as an act of aggression."

Tokayev said he had already requested the CSTO nations' help in fighting the "terrorist threat," which he said was aimed at "undermining the territorial integrity" of Kazakhstan.

The CSTO is a security treaty between six former Soviet states: Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia and Tajikistan. Azerbaijan was originally a member of the organization upon its foundation in 1994, but withdrew in 1999. Kyrgyzstan came close to asking for the deployment of peacekeepers 2010, during clashes between the country's ethnic Kyrgyz and Uzbek populations, but the bloc did not agree to provide military assistance on that occasion.


Shortly after Tokayev's address, Almaty's authorities said in a statement that a "counter-terrorist" operation has been launched in the city, aiming to "re-establish order" and "stop acts of terrorism and banditry that threaten our wellbeing and our future."
Details of the battles between 'protesters' and the country's security forces emerge:
Footage circulating online, purportedly shot in Almaty, shows a large group of servicemen in riot gear walking though the middle of a street, with multiple explosions heard in the background.


Another video shows an empty street with two civilians running for cover amid heavy gunfire.

Meanwhile, the Almaty authorities told the media that while troops have been dispatched to the city, the "active phase" of the operation will not be taking place at night.


"Some 317 police officers and members of the National Guard were injured, eight got killed. Law enforcement agencies are currently taking all the necessary measures to prevent an escalation of the violence," the ministry said in a statement reported by local media.

By 21:00 CET yesterday, the CSTO had agreed to send in a 'peacekeeping deployment':
"In response to the appeal by [President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev] and considering the threat to the national security and sovereignty of Kazakhstan, caused, among other things, by outside interference, the CSTO Collective Security Council decided to send the Collective Peacekeeping Forces to the Republic of Kazakhstan in accordance with Article 4 of the Collective Security Treaty," Armenian Prime Minister Pashinyan said in a statement on Facebook.
CSTO troops
© Sputnik / Konstantin MihalchevskiyFILE PHOTO: Rubezh-2021 joint military drills by the Collective Rapid Response Forces of the CSTO member states, Sept. 7, 2021
The alliance has yet to announce the scope and details of the deployment, but Pashinyan said the troops will stay in Kazakhstan "for a limited period of time in order to stabilize and normalize the situation."

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