Glen_Kealy_the Sculptor


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http://www.wikipediaexposed.org/

 

WikipediaExposed.org take great pleasure in bringing to public spotlight important information, facts and opinions that would be of benefit to people on planet earth to know about and openly discuss that other non independent and controlled mainstream media outlets and websites will not provide to the world. We understand that everyone has an independent expression of who they are and what is important to them. Our goal is to give an international public forum for the unique personality of every individual who feel the need to have their important information, facts and opinions publicly exposed to the world.

Wikipedia Exposed As Corrupt Tool of The Establishment OCTOBER 26, 2018 BY 21WIRE 

https://21stcenturywire.com/2018/10/26/wikipedia-exposed-as-corrupt-tool-of-the-establishment/ 

Big Business have turned Wikipedia into platform for propaganda into a platform for private propaganda for the ruling elite ..

RT America’s Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Chris Hedges, talks with investigative journalist Helen Buyniski who exposes an editing racket resembling a type of “pay to play” policy, along with a collapse in credibility of this highly-politicized organization. Despite the obvious signs, a wave of disinformation is still being allowed by Wikipedia’s aloof co-founder Jimmy Wales (pictured above) who has knowingly allowed his online portal to transition from an egalitarian knowledge base into yet another corrupt tool of the ruling elite.

“... its become more and more obvious that Wikipedia is a website that should have no credibility at all … it would be one thing if Wikipedia was considered to be just a bias source like a trash rag … the bathroom wall of the Internet I like to call such trash rage… but it’s not ,, Wikipedia is considered the holy oracle of truth ….. however Wikipedia is really anything by the holy oracle of truth …” ….  investigative journalist Helen Buyniski 

“..Wikipedia has become an online source of instant information about politics, people, countries, conflicts and an array of historical events that confine our culture …

But this online Wikipedia search is completely different from the old scholarly well researched encyclopedia or academic journals  that once graced library shelves … Wikipedia’scontributors and editors are largely anonymous and are not required to show or produce any expertise in the subjects they write about and edit .. they are often unpaid …there are those who bear grudges .. or … champion particular ideologies or conspiracy theories .. along wit bib business …that closely monitors and edits all that appears about its products and business dealings that has turned Wikipedia into a platform for private propaganda … nowhere is this more evident in the way Wikipedia treats left wing anti capitalist critics such as the British MP George Galloway …  along with journalists such as Glen Greenwald and Seymour Hersh … Joining me is investigative journalist Helen Buyniski  to discuss Wikipedia and how it has become the tool to ]propagate the reining ideologies and biases for the ruling elite ….” …RT America’s Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, Chris Hedges,

 

Investigative journalist Helen Buyniski exposes Jimmy Wales' egalitarian Wikipedia as yet another tool of the ruling elite writes for RT And is on Twitter @Bellocirapture23 www.helenofdestroy.com/

ON CONTACT: 

Wikipedia 

 A Tool Of The Ruling Elite


RT America: Published on Oct 20, 2018

On the latest episode of On Contact,

investigative journalist Helen Buyniski exposes Jimmy Wales' egalitarian Wikipedia 

as yet another tool of the ruling elite. 

More from Helen here: http://helenofdestroy.com/index.php/4...

Find RT America in your area: http://rt.com/where-to-watch/ 

Or watch us online: http://rt.com/on-air/rt-america-air/ 

Like us on Facebook //www.facebook.com/RTAmerica Follow us on Twitter //twitter.com/RT_America

Category: News & Politics


Two Clintons 41 years 

$3 Billion

https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/politics/clinton-money/??noredirect=on

A Washington Post investigation reveals how Bill and Hillary Clinton have methodically cultivated donors over 40 years, from Little Rock to Washington and then across the globe. Their fundraising methods have created a new blueprint for politicians and their donors.

The Clintons have raised $3 billion in support of their political and philanthropic efforts over four decades. Nearly all the funds went to support six federal campaigns and their family foundation.

By Matea Gold, Tom Hamburger and Anu Narayanswamy - Published on Nov. 19, 2015

LITTLE ROCK — Over four decades of public life, Bill and Hillary Clinton have built an unrivaled global network of donors while pioneering fundraising techniques that have transformed modern politics and paved the way for them to potentially become the first husband and wife to win the White House.
The grand total raised for all of their political campaigns and their family’s charitable foundation reaches at least $3 billion, according to a Washington Post investigation.
Their fundraising haul, which began with $178,000 that Bill Clinton raised for his long-shot 1974 congressional bid, is on track to expand substantially with Hillary Clinton’s 2016 White House run, which has already drawn $110 million in support.

The Post identified donations from roughly 336,000 individuals, corporations, unions and foreign governments in support of their political or philanthropic endeavors — a list that includes top patrons such as Steven Spielberg and George Soros, as well as lesser-known backers who have given smaller amounts dozens of times. Not included in the count are an untold number of small donors whose names are not identified in campaign finance reports but together have given millions to the Clintons over the years.

 


Jet Wintzer, MOON HOAX NOW


moonfakery

Published on Jun 14, 2015

SUBSCRIBE 2.6K

MOON HOAX NOW a documentary film by Jet Wintzer (55 minutes) ©2015 Filminco Productions Award winning feature and documentary filmmaker Jet Wintzer launches into the Apollo moon hoax conspiracy with new research mined from an exhaustive exploration of the official NASA broadcasts and public record. MOON HOAX NOW drops multiple bombshell smoking guns that forcefully prove aspects of the record to be a fraudulent charade. The film features esoteric clips from the live TV footage, gorgeous 16mm film reels, stunning hi def photographs and technical manuals soundtracked to an original spaced out trancey score. The film is narrated by Jet who painstakingly dissects the running dialogue between the astronauts and mission control paying close attention to shocking mistakes, stressed out reactions and on the fly attempted coverups. More than just an attack on the official story, MOON HOAX NOW is also an exciting reverent new appraisal of the mission as one of the greatest works of conceptual art ever made. Using rare footage, vintage Nasa promotional films and dazzling analysis, MOON HOAX NOW takes the viewer on a voyeuristic voyage behind the vast dazzling lunar curtain. Jet Wintzer’s awards page at IMDB http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4569683/aw... ------------------------ «Лунная афера» Новый документальный фильм режиссёра Джета Винтзера (Jet Wintzer) (55 мин) ©2015 Filminco Productions Дорога в один конец к самой великой лжи, когда либо рассказанной человечеству. Джет рассматривает 6 эпизодов. К сожалению нет перевода на русский, а мне делать это влом. Дело в том, что я давно уже убедился в фальшивости американских лунных подвигов, и главными аргументами были не фото и видео ляпы, а отсутствие технической возможности таких полётов. Однако людям больше нравятся видеоаномалии, поэтому вкратце перескажу содержание фильма здесь: http://bigphils.livejournal.com/40626... Об авторе: Джет Винтзер является удостоенным премиями кинематографистом. Ссылка на список его наград: http://www.imdb.com/name/nm4569683/aw...



Money, happiness and eternal life

Greed (director's cut)

DW Documentary

DW Documentary

Published on Jun 23, 2017

Can money and power ever make us happy?

How much is enough?

Our constant desire for more is part of our human nature.

Some call it a useful dowry of evolution, others a fault in the human genetic make-up:

The old mortal sin Greed seems to be more ubiquitous than ever.

Why can't people ever get enough, where is this self-indulgence leading -

 and are there any ways out of this vicious circle of gratification?

"People like to have a lot of stuff because it makes them the feeling of living forever," says American social psychologist Sheldon Solomon, who believes today's materialism and consumerism will have disastrous consequences.

Anyone who fails to satisfy his or her desires in this age of the Ego is deemed a loser.

But with more than 7 billion people on the Earth, the ramifications of this excessive consumption of resources are already clear. Isn’t the deplorable state of our planet proof enough that

 "The Greed Program," which has made us crave possessions, status and power, is coming to an end? Or is the frenzied search for more and more still an indispensable part of our nature?

We set off to look for the essence of greed. And we tell the stories of people who - whether as perpetrators or victims or even just as willing consumers -

 have become accomplices in a sea change in values.

 Check out our web special: http://www.dw.com/en/tv/greed/s-32898 _______

Exciting, powerful and informative –

DW Documentary is always close to current affairs and international events.

Our eclectic mix of award-winning films and reports take you straight to the heart of the story. Dive into different cultures, journey across distant lands, and discover the inner workings of modern-day life.

Subscribe and explore the world around you – every day, one DW Documentary at a time.

Subscribe to DW Documentary: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW39... 

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Category

Education


Glen Kealy exposes the hidden not talked about history of Planet Earth







https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fhx-Hdl-qQU


Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 5, 2009 

FREEMASONRY HAS HAD MANY NAMES~! ALTHOUGH FREEMASONRY HAS USED MANY THOUSANDS OF NAMES OVER NUMEROUS CENTURIES AN EASILY DEFINABLE COMMON THREAD LINKS THEM ALL TO~GET~HER! Freemasonry is "a war to the death against thinking women and those men who support them", which is being fought covertly by the descendants of the first Pedophile Predator Priests from the "Land of Punt", who were banned from participation in the affairs of Matrial Clan Society, some 60,000 years ago. Since then, they have by means of a step-by-step conspiracy, lied about world history, divided humans in order to conquer and destroyed the credibility of women as long range nurturers and planners; convinced some braindead men that they should themselves lead a new patriarchal elitist system (based on the works of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle), while in fact taking over the management of world affairs themselves under the cover of secret societies governed at the top, symbolically, by "men who wear dresses in public" (ie: Kings, Politicians, Priests, Judges, Lawyers, Doctors, Scientists, Arab Emirs, Scots and selected University Professors and Graduates ~ MBA, PHD and LLD). These Priest-Hoods have destroyed the paradise that was here long ago and now infest our word boxes with their confusing variety of languages (6000) and criminal financial system that rewards thieves and idiots.  

Isn't it time that we woke-up to these little known facts and respond appropriately. 




The business of pain relief 

DW Documentary

 (Pharma documentary)

DW Documentary

Published on Nov 2, 2018

Pain relief medication is easily available over the counter in many countries. 

Our documentary investigates the big business of painkillers. [Online until: 02.12.2018]

 Millions of consumers in Germany and France are well provided for with cheap, fast-acting, 

over the counter painkillers without any significant side effects -- diclofenac, ibuprofen, aspirin and paracetamol. 

At least, that’s how it looks. But the pharmaceutical industry influences politicians and doctors and 

cover up fatal risks, as this investigative documentary shows. 

More than 150 million packs of over-the-counter painkillers are sold in Germany and France every year. 

But patients are rarely given enough information about what they are taking. 

Over the counter pain relief worth more than half a billion euros are sold annually. 

The investigative journalists behind the US website "Dollars for Docs" are following the money. 

In the documentary, Pulitzer Prize-winner Tracy Weber explains how they come by the data of US doctors 

who receive money from the pharmaceutical industry, in the form of lecture fees, consulting fees or vacation trips. 

Some physicians earn as much as a million dollars a year in addition to their normal practice. 

Questions about the independence of these physicians have now led to a new law in the US,

 that requires doctors to disclose the funds they receive from industry. 

Featuring both critics and advocates of the practice,

 the documentary looks at how physicians are involved in the pharmaceutical industry.

 Meanwhile, Waldtraut Eicke’s case shows just how fatal faith in analgesics can be. 

Years of analgesic use has made her a dialysis patient. Her kidneys no longer work - 

known in the jargon as "analgesic kidneys.” _______ 

DW Documentary gives you knowledge beyond the headlines. 

Watch high-class documentaries from German broadcasters and international production companies. 

Meet intriguing people, travel to distant lands, get a look behind the complexities of daily life and 

build a deeper understanding of current affairs and global events. 

Subscribe and explore the world around you with DW Documentary. 

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For more documentaries visit: http://www.dw.com/en/tv/docfilm/s-3610 

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Category

Education

Jordan Maxwell Most Brilliant 15 Minutes Control System

381,618 views


Anthony Partridge

Published on Nov 25, 2014

controlled



BBC

Masters of Money

Karl Marx HD

 

DarthMarston

Published on Jan 30, 2016

Stephanie Flanders examines one of the most revolutionary and controversial thinkers of all.

Karl Marx's ideas left an indelible stamp on the lives of billions of people and the world we live in today.

As the global financial crisis continues on its destructive path, some are starting to wonder if he was right.

Marx argued that capitalism is inherently unfair and therefore doomed to collapse, so it should be got rid of altogether.

Today as the gap between rich and poor continues to cause tension, his ideas are once again being taken seriously at the heart of global business.

Stephanie travels from Marx's birthplace to a former communist regime detention centre in

Berlin and separates his economic analysis from what was carried out in his name.

She asks what answers does Marx provide to the mess we are all in today.

Category

Entertainment


THE PROPERTIES OF MONATOMIC GOLD

By Reg Presley





The former Troggs lead singer and now long-time researcher of the mysterious and unknown writes about the background to monatomic gold in his book, Wild Things They Don't Tell Us. This section is reproduced for you by kind permission of Blake Publishing.

For an Adobe PDF Version - Click Here

I must have been a teacher's nightmare when I was at school. When other children were satisfied with the teacher's answer, I was the one who asked, 'Why?' and wasn't always satisfied with the answer I got. This did not stop when I left school – it got worse. Teachers' replies were generally the stock answers that they had received when they were at school. Things change, and I, for one, needed up-to-the-minute, well-thought- out answers.

The problem is that when you leave school the first of your adult problems surfaces, the business of earning a living. That nasty five-letter word that you never really place any importance on at school rears its ugly head - money. Having to earn money puts an immediate brake on real learning, because we're forced into concentrating on learning our job so that we can feed ourselves and get from one end of the week to the other.

That, for most people, is the way it stays for the rest of their lives. Unless of course you become older, with more time on your hands, or you become a millionaire, or both. You have no time to think about the fringe elements of life or to trace them to any decent conclusions. The powers that be probably like it that way no time to question anything. 

It has been said for years that money is the root of all evil, and that's right. If it weren't for money there would be no drug problems. If people were not earning money from selling it, they would not push it. That in turn would free up our police force, because crime connected to drugs would cease. In fact, you would have no new addictions.

It might be a good idea, right now, if those in power made centres all over the country and supplied drugs for free. This would stop pushers immediately, which would prevent young people and even children getting hooked - so your six-year-old need never come into contact with drugs. For those already hooked it's too late. Let's try to save the innocent. Even judges have said this would be a good idea, so why hasn't this implemented? The only conclusion you can draw is that people in high places would cease to make money from it.

If the government really wanted to free up the roads to stop the pollution that traffic causes, they should never have privatised the railways. If everyone in the country paid than the cost of a TV licence the railway could be run for and if the railway was free, more people would use it instead of their cars.

But no, what will happen is one of two things. The government will either do as the continentals have build toll booths, which will cost billions, or they will put petrol up so high that it makes the railways look cheap. Neither of these will stop pollution. It'll just mean the government will be able to thieve more money from us when we travel. And pollution will carry on getting worse.

What happened to the billions of taxpayers' money that was used to drill for the then promised oil bonanza from the North Sea? We didn't see oil prices drop! In fact we've only seen them rise. The price of oil in England is almost the highest in the world. Why? By now you're probably thinking that this is a party political broadcast on behalf of the They Screw You Out Of Everything Party. All I ask is for your patience. It all has relevance to the wider picture.

We humans, for example, have always been told that gold is a precious metal and we never question it. Why? It is not precious. It is in everything. It's even in seawater. Governments use gold to underpin their currency. Why? Startling new evidence is slowly coming to the fore that could stand the world on its head.

In the early 1900s an archaeologist called William Flinders Petrie climbed Mount Horeb in Iraq and discovered what was first thought to be a temple. Now it is believed it was where the large-scale smelting of a particular metal took place - that metal being gold. Also found at this site was a large amount of a strange white powder.

The site was thought to be at least 6-8,000 years old. Now it may be that we haven't heard about this because it doesn't fit in with the consensus of archaeologists on when man could melt certain metals. However, it is more likely to be because of the way it was smelted. Gold melts at 1063°C. But it appears that at Mount Horeb they used heat close to the temperature of the Sun's surface - which is approximately 6,000 degrees C.

To get those kinds of temperatures 8,000 years ago was a feat in itself. But this next piece of information is mind-boggling. They were not content just to melt the gold, they went one step further and almost vapourised it. I'll explain. Today if we want to analyse a metal to find out what it consists of, it is burnt at a temperature close to that of the Sun for a period of 15 to 20 seconds. In that 20 seconds, a chart will tell the scientist exactly what elements the metal consists of. At least, that's what most scientists think.

However, buried in red tape, and only just coming to light, is the work of a Russian scientist, who asked; 'Why burn for only 15 to 20 seconds?' He then set up apparatus to burn for much longer periods. Nothing happened at 20 seconds, 30 seconds, 40 seconds, 50, 60, or 69 but at 70 seconds, the apparatus then registered elements from the palladium group - platinum and other precious metals - all from an ordinary piece of iron.

Although amazing in itself, the really incredible thing is what happens to the metal, especially when gold is melted this way. At a 70-second burn there is suddenly a bright light, like a thousand flash bulbs going off, and all that is left behind in the crucible is a white powder. The gold vanishes. Another amazing thing is that the crucible has very little weight and so does the powder. If you then take the powder out of crucible, the weight returns to the crucible. Now I'm scientist, but that sure sounds like what is known as 'super-conductivity' to me.

So, why did a race of people 8,000 years ago need super conductivity? What did they need the white powder for? If a heavy stone crucible loses its weight with this white powder in it, could you put this powder on large stones and move them to build large structures with ease, perhaps while building pyramids? Pyramids are by their very name 'fire begotten'; derived from the Latin word pyre meaning fire. To find out the answer to this question, it's perhaps better to tell you about the civilisation responsible.

It has always been assumed that the Sumerians were the first civilisation on Earth. However, since the dig at Mount Horeb by Petrie, it appears they were not. Found at the site were thousands of what looked like earthenware rolling-pins with writings around their circumferences. The writing was like no other known to man, and has taken many years to decipher.

The stories they tell are chilling but also exciting. The one thing about finding pottery scrolls is that you have the master dye, unlike books, which could be changed over the years. All that was needed was for them to roll the scroll onto wet clay then decipher what they saw.

The civilisation called itself the Anunnaki. They were as civilised as we are. They had schools, lawyers, books and fashion shows. The scrolls told the story of a whole civilisation, and its way of life. The civilisation spoke of making Cro Magnon man from Neanderthal man. They were not happy with the results, and their leaders argued they should destroy them, which they did by way of a great flood, saving only a few. Those who survived were bred with the Anunnaki women to make Homo Sapiens, or thinking man.

God said, 'let us make man in our image, in our likeness'. Notice a plural is used for God. In the Old Testament Genesis account it states, 'male and female created he them and he called their name Adam'. Older writings use the more complete name Adama which means 'Earthling'. The first of these beings were called Adam and Eve, then known asAtaba and Khawa. It may well be that they were bred by the Anunnaki to be the Earthly Rulers, that they were the beginning of the blood royal, the Holy Grail. Who were these people! If this is correct, no wonder they've never found the missing link.

At this point I suddenly had a thought. Why do human beings have to shield their eyes with their hand to see on a sunny day! No other animal has to squint so why do we! You don't see a horse or a cow squinting do you! A bird which flies high up in the sky where the Sun shines the' brightest doesn't even use its eyelids until it goes to sleep. A polar bear doesn't suffer with snow blindness caused by the reflection of the Sun that shines even brighter with the glare. When a deer or rabbit gets caught in your car headlights, they do not even blink let alone squint. Why!

Because they have adapted to living on Earth. Cro-Magnon man had a large forehead, which shielded his eyes; he would not have had to squint either. Evolution doesn't go backwards does it?

If we were from Earth we would still have a large protruding forehead to protect our eyes. Or our eyes themselves would have adapted by now. We must have come from a planet that was a little further away from its Sun. Are we the descendants of the Anunnaki! In the Old Testament we can read stories of people living until they are 800 or 900 years old. This has been put down to translating errors by those who collated the Bible, with the Church merely saying, they meant to say 80 or 90 years old.

According to the Anunnaki, to rule over their subjects, their leaders needed longevity.

Let's face it, if you get older you usually get wiser. Eight hundred years' worth is a lot of wisdom. To ensure this was the case, the Anunnaki fed their leaders bread and wine. Red wine as we know today, is very good for you; a glass a day can unclog your veins and keep them clear. The bread the Anunnaki fed their leaders was made from a white powder made from the burning of the gold. Eating the bread made from the powdered gold, according to the Anunnaki, made their leaders more intelligent and made them live much longer.

Now the Catholic Church must have known about this, because they still give the bread and wine in their Holy Communion ceremonies. One thing we can all be sure of today, is that there will be no gold powder in their bread. We know that the last person to be fed this bread in a ceremony was the second Pharaoh. Then it stopped. When Moses led the Jews out of Egypt, the Bible would have you believe he went up Mount Sinai and saw the burning bush and God gave him the Ten Commandments. If that were the case, he marched his people about 50 miles out of their way, and they would not have been pleased. It is more likely he went up Mount Horeb, which is en route and the story then fits what happened to him there.

The Ten Commandments were no problem for Moses. Having been brought up by a Pharaoh he would have known the inaugural ceremony of the Pharaohs, in which they had to repeat after the high priest: 'I have not killed. I have not committed adultery.' And so on.

All Moses did was change the first words to Thou shalt, instead of, I Have, and it was all over bar the carving.

The ordinary Israelites would not have been aware of the inaugural words so would not have been any the wiser.

The interesting part of this is the burning bush. When you arc gold for 70 seconds at Sun temperature, it has been found that a pencil standing on its end right next to the flash, scorches but does not fall over. What did Moses witness on top of Mount Horeb? Was it the burning of gold, when he saw the blinding light and spoke to God through the burning bush that didn't actually burn? Did Moses make a mistake and think that the Anunnaki was God or did he know the Anunnaki as his creators so naturally thought of them as his God?

On Moses' return to his people from the Mount, he sees them worshipping a golden calf and, according to the Bible, becomes angry, burns the golden calf to dust and makes them eat it. He then smashes the tablets of stone, throws them in the Ark of the Covenant, and off they go. The Bible makes it sound as though Moses was punishing the Israelites by making them eat the calf.

It could be that he was actually turning them all into leaders. You actually smelt gold - you don't burn it. But it sounds as if that is exactly what he did. The only way of burning gold to a powder is in 70 seconds at the temperature of the Sun's surface, and only then if the gold is very thin. Otherwise you need to maintain that high temperature for 300 seconds.

It is interesting to note that the Bible puts all the emphasis on the Ten Commandments which, as we now know, were easy for Moses to create. Could the Bible be taking our attention away from the importance of the Ark of the Covenant and what it really held within? Remember it took at least four people to lift and eight to carry the Ark of the Covenant. They were told not to touch the sides, only the handles.

Did the Bible conveniently get the spelling wrong? Could it be the Arc of the Covenant? As in electrical arc? Is it the arc that melts the gold, with which they make the bread for higher intelligence? Is this why it's been hidden from us for thousands of years? To get the kind of temperature necessary to almost vaporise gold you would need a capacitor, and that sounds very much what the Ark of the Covenant was.

It is a fact that our brains contain a white substance. Gold is the best conductor of electricity. Our brains receive messages by electronic impulses which travel through this white substance. Scientists also know that something in your brain is super-conducting but as yet they don't know what. If we were all very intelligent, there wouldn't be any workers. We'd all be leaders.

The people responsible for putting a value on gold had to be somebody who knew gold's ultimate potential or capabilities. To the Anunnaki it was more than prized, they needed it for their way of life and probably their very existence. They could not have been from this planet, because they were too advanced for that time. So could it be they arrived from somewhere to find that the inhabitants of planet Earth are Neanderthal - not even intelligent enough to work for them.

Perhaps they then set about upgrading them to Homo Sapiens and, eventually, succeeded.

They would then have needed leaders to keep order, and perhaps they fed these leaders with the white powdered gold. The Homo Sapiens would then have been taught that gold is precious and that it needed to be mined. When the Homo Sapiens had mined it, their leaders could hoard it in vast quantities. Once the process was in motion, it would be able to run by itself. Not, perhaps, forever, but for at least a few thousand years or so. All that would be needed would be to give the Homo Sapiens a helping hand occasionally, and you would have a mining community that takes care of itself, doesn't need paying and doesn't even know who its boss is.

If you are an Anunnaki, and you live for 800 years, you don't have to wait many generations to collect your rewards. Like gathering the honey from the bees, one day the bosses will be coming back to harvest the gold, which is kept in nice convenient little heaps like at Fort Knox, ready for collection. Think about it. If you asked anybody on this planet why we prize such a common metal as gold, they could not tell you. There is no reason; most gold just sits there collecting dust.

The Anunnaki's system would continue to operate unhindered. They gave us a way of life that suited them, not necessarily us, but we knew no different. If we are looking for answers to the thousands of questions this raises, the answers have to lie with the Anunnaki themselves. Who were they? Where did they come from? And, just as important, where did they go?

They certainly existed, and we know this because of the scrolls and their writings. Some of these are in the British Museum, along with vials of the white powder made from the gold, although the latter is not on public display. The remainder are in the Baghdad Museum which the Americans bombed during the Gulf War. By accident? I think not. To hide a secret as big as this, you have to be in complete control of the evidence. Now they are.

According to their scrolls, the Anunnaki must have had a long-term objective when they start talking about changing Neanderthal into Cro-Magnon man, then into Homo Sapiens. This is powerful stuff; this is no ordinary race of people we're talking about. We're talking about manipulating DNA. The idea of anybody knowing about such things at that time is difficult to comprehend. Then, when this race of people are successful, seeding two Homo Sapiens who they name Adam and Eve, through to Abraham, Moses and Jesus this is mind blowing.

It is a strong possibility that the Anunnaki will soon come back for their gold. Can you imagine if the Anunnaki are doing this all round the universe? Upgrading life forms so that they can gather gold for them? Will there soon come a time when we realise that we needed the gold for our own technical evolution, and it'll be too late to save any of it?

The Europeans did the same thing to the native Americans, the native Australians, the Africans, and many others. When will we be paying them back for the gold we took? I think never. Nor will the Anunnaki be paying us back. With so many UFO sightings since the war, the Anunnaki could be here sooner rather than later.

The way all this information came to light really intrigued me. When I first spoke to Laurence Gardner, a genealogist and author of Bloodline Of The Holy Grail, I was amazed to learn that the book was a by-product of his being commissioned by a European prince to trace his family tree.

He began the laborious job of tracing the Prince's ancestors back through the ages until he reached a point where he felt the need to confront the prince with the question, 'Do you know where this is all leading?' The prince asked, 'What do you mean?' Laurence replied, 'Do you realise your family lineage goes back to Jesus?' to which the royal replied, 'Oh yes I knew that, I just wanted to know how it got there.' Laurence replied, 'Well, I'm sure not many people know this.' What the Royal took for granted, we mere mortals knew nothing about. 

When Laurence had finished the work for the Royal he decided to write the book. However he became so intrigued by his findings he could not stop at that, and carried on investigating Jesus' bloodline, and produced his second book, Genesis Of The Grail Kings, which led a trail through from Jesus to Moses, Abraham and Adam and Eve.

An interesting point that this raises is that the Bible states that Jesus' father Joseph was a carpenter. However, this is not what the original text of the Bible states. What was actually said was that Joseph was a Master of the Craft. Anyone who knows a little of modern Freemasonry will know the term 'the craft' and it has nothing to do with wood.

What the Bible was actually telling us (before the Church got hold of it) was that Joseph was just one of a long line of highly trained metallurgists. The only people that could be metallurgists at that time were priests and royalty and you would need to be a metallurgist to be able to convert gold into white powder.

To add more weight to Laurence's work (if that's possible) is the work of the pioneering researcher David Hudson, an American dirt farmer. Now according to David, the difference between dirt farmers and ordinary farmers is that the dirt farmer has to make his own soil from pulverising rock. In 1975 he was doing an analysis of natural products in the area where he was farming. David explains:

'You have to understand that in agriculture, in the state of Arizona we have a problem with sodium soil. This high-sodium soil, which looks like chocolate ice cream on the ground, is just crunchy black. It crunches when you walk on it. Water will not penetrate this soil. Water will not leech the sodium out of the ground. It's called black alkali.'

David was aware that it was possible to leech the sodium from the soil with sulphuric acid. Neighbouring his farm was a copper mine whose waste product was sulphuric acid. He was able to obtain as much as he needed as long as he moved it himself. He eventually administered between 30-60 tons per acre over his land. This penetrated 3 or 4 inches into the ground. When he irrigated, the soil would froth and foam due to the action of the sulphuric acid. What it did was to change black alkali into white alkali, which was water-soluble.

Within two years he was able to grow crops. Evidently it is very important to have enough calcium in the soil in the form of calcium carbonate. Calcium carbonate will act as a buffer for the acid in the soil. If you do not have enough calcium, the acidity in the soil goes down. You get a pH of 4 to 4.5 and it ties up all the trace nutrients, that being the case the cotton plant would come out of the ground and suddenly stop growing. David said, 'It is important when you are putting all these amendments to your soil that you understand what is in your soil, how much iron there is, how much calcium and so on.'

In doing the analysis of these natural products David was coming across a 'material consisting of no one knew quite what, It seemed more abundant in one area so they decided to begin there. Using chemistry he dissolved the material in a solution and it became blood red. Yet when he precipitated this material out chemically by using a reductant of powdered zinc, the material would come out as a black precipitant just like it was supposed to if it were a 'noble' element. With a noble element, if you chemically bring it out of acid, it won't re-dissolve in the acid.

After he precipitated this material out of the black he took the material and dried it. At the time David had no drying furnace so he just took it outside in the warm Arizona sunshine which, he says, was 115 degrees at 5 per cent humidity, so it really dried fast. Then a strange thing happened.

After the material dried, it exploded. But this was no normal explosion. It just went poof! It was neither an explosion, nor an implosion; all the material had gone in a flash as if 50,000 flash bulbs had gone off all at one time. So David took a new pencil and stood it on end next to the material as it was drying. When the material detonated, it burned the pencil about 30 per cent but did not knock the pencil over. Whatever this stuff was, David thought, it was wild.

He discovered if he dried the material away from sunlight, it not explode. He then took some of the powder that had dried away from the sunlight, and using a crucible reductionvessel made of porcelain, he mixed the powdered material with lead and flux, and heated it until the lead melted. When you do this, the metals that are heavier than lead stay in the lead and those that are lighter float out. This is a tried  and-tested way of doing metals analysis.

This material settled to the bottom of the lead just as if it was gold and silver. It seemed to be denser than lead and it was separated from it. Yet when he took this material and put it on a bone ash cupel, the lead soaked into the cupel and left a bead of gold and silver. He then took this bead of gold and silver for analysis to all the commercial laboratories and they said, 'Dave,       there is nothing there but gold and silver'. The strange thing was, Dave could take the bead and hit it with a hammer and shatter it, like glass. There is no known alloy of gold and silver that is not soft. Gold and silver dissolve in each other readily and form a solid solution.

Both are soft elements so any alloy made from them will be soft and ductile. If you hit gold and/or silver with a hammer it will flatten out like a pancake. David told them, 'Something's going on here that we don't understand. Something unusual is happening,' David took the beads of gold and silver back to his laboratory and separated them chemically.

All he had left was a quantity of black stuff. He then took this back to the commercial laboratories and they told him it was iron, silica and aluminium. He told them it couldn't be iron, silica and aluminium. Firstly you can't dissolve it in any acids or any bases once it is totally dry. It doesn't dissolve in fuming sulphuric acid, it doesn't dissolve in sulphuric nitric acid, and it doesn't dissolve in hydrochloric nitric acid. Even gold dissolves in that, yet it won't dissolve this black stuff.

David decided to hire a PhD at Cornell University who considered himself an expert on precious elements. He paid the doctor to go to Arizona to see the problem for himself. He told David he had a machine back at Cornell that could analyse down to parts per billion. He said, 'If you let me take this material back to Cornell I'll tell you exactly what you have, if it's anything above iron we will find it.'

When they arrived back and tested the material he told David, 'You have iron, silica and aluminium.' David asked, 'Can we borrow a chemistry laboratory?' The doctor told him there was one not being used and together they spent the rest of the day there. They were able to remove all of the silica, all of the iron and all of the aluminium. Yet they still had 98 per cent of the sample that was pure nothing.

By now, more than a little frustrated, David said, 'I can hold this in my hand, I can weigh it, I can perform chemistry with it. That has to be something. It is not nothing.' The doctor told David if he would give him US$350,000 dollars as a grant he would get graduate students to look into it. David had already paid him US$22,000, because he said he could analyse anything, and he hadn't. Neither had he offered to pay David back. So David said, 'I don't know what you pay people around here, but I pay minimum wages on the farm and get a whole lot more out of US$350,000 than you can. So I'm going back to do the work myself.'

He went back to Phoenix totally disillusioned with academia. He was neither impressed with the PhDs or the money they charged. He discovered whilst at Cornell that they work students to generate papers, but the papers say nothing. The government however pays them for every paper they write, so they get their money based on the amount of papers they turn out. They all say the same thing: they just reword it and turn out another paper.

David was in no way about to give in, and began asking around the Phoenix area where he found a man who was a spectroscopist who had studied in West Germany at the Institute for Spectroscopy. He had also been a technician for a Lab Test company in Los Angeles, which actually built spectroscopic equipment.

He was also the man who blueprinted the machines, and designed them, constructed them, then took them to the field and made them work. David thought, here is a good man. This is not just a technician. Here is a man who knows how the machine works. Around this time, David had obtained a Soviet book entitled, The Analytical Chemistry of the Platinum Group Elements by Ginzburg, et al. The Soviet Academy of Science published it. David continues:

'In this book, according to the Soviets, you had to do a 300 -second burn on these elements to read them. For those who have never performed spectroscopy, it involves taking a carbon electrode that is cupped at the top. You then put the powder on that electrode; you bring the other electrode down above it, which creates an arc. In about 15 seconds, the carbon at this high temperature burns away, the electrode's gone and your sample's gone.

All normal laboratories in the USA and possibly right around the world are doing this, then giving a full and final result after only a 15 second burn. 'According to the Soviet Academy of Sciences, the boiling temperature of water is to the boiling temperature of iron just as the boiling temperature of iron is to the boiling temperature of these elements. As you know from driving a car, as long as there is water in the motor of your car the temperature of the car engine will never get hotter than the temperature of water.

If you just heated the water on the stove in a pan, you know that the pan never gets hotter than the boiling temperature of water until the water is gone. Once all the water is gone, the temperature skyrockets very fast.

'As long as there is iron there, the temperature of the sample can never get hotter than the boiling temperature of the iron, so you can then heat this stuff. Now, it is hard to fathom how something with as high a temperature as iron could be just like water to these elements, but it is.

'So we had to design and build an excitation chamber where argon gas could be put around this electrode so that no oxygen or air could get into the carbon electrode and we could burn it not for 15 seconds but for 300 seconds. According to the

Soviet Academy of Sciences, this is the length of time we had to burn the sample.

'We set up, we got the Pk blenders, we got the standards, we modified the machine, we did all the analysis for results, we did all the spectral lines on this three-and-a-half-metre instrument. It was a huge machine. It took up the whole garage area. It was about 30 feet long and about 8 or 9 feet high.

'Anyway, when we ran this material, during the first 15 seconds we got iron, silica, and aluminium, little traces of calcium and sodium, maybe a little titanium now and then, and then it went quiet and nothing read. So, at the end of 15 seconds, we were getting nothing. Twenty seconds, 25 seconds, 30 seconds, 35 seconds, 40 seconds - still nothing. Forty-five seconds, 50 seconds, 55 seconds, 60 seconds, 65 seconds, but if you looked in through the coloured glass, sitting there on the carbon electrode was this little ball of white material. There was still something in there.

'At 70 seconds, exactly when the Soviet Academy of Sciences said it would read, palladium began to read. And after the palladium, platinum began to read. After the platinum, rhodium began to read. After rhodium, ruthenium began to read. After the ruthenium, then iridium began to read and after the iridium, osmium began to read.

'Now, if you're like me, I didn't know what these elements were. I had heard of platinum, but what were these other elements? Well, there are six platinum group elements in the periodic table, not just platinum. They didn't find out about them at the same time, so they have been added one at a time.

'They are all elements: ruthenium, rhodium and palladium are light platinum. Well, we came to find out that rhodium was selling for about US$3,000 per ounce. Gold sells for about US$400 an ounce. Iridium sells for about US$800 an ounce. Then you say to yourself "Gee, these are important materials, aren't they?" They are important materials because the best known deposits in the world are now being mined in South Africa.

'In this deposit you have to go half a mile into the ground and mine an 18-inch seam of this stuff. When you bring it out, it contains one-third of one ounce per ton of all the precious elements. We checked our analysis, which we ran for two-and -a-half years, over and over. We checked every spectral line. We checked every potential on interference; we checked every aspect. We wanted exact matches.

'When we were finished, the man was able to do quantitative analysis, and he said "Dave, you have 6 to 8 ounce per ton of palladium, 12 to 13 ounces per ton of platinum, 150 ounces per ton of osmium, 250 ounces per ton of ruthenium, 600 ounces per ton of iridium, and 800 ounces per ton of rhodium, or a total of 2,400 ounces per ton, when the best-known deposit in the world is one-third of one ounce per ton."

This work wasn't an indication that these elements were there. These elements were there and they were there in beacoup amounts. They were saying, "Hey stupid man, pay attention! We are trying to show you something." lf they had been there in little amounts, I probably would have been content with this. But they were there in such huge amounts, I said, "Golly, how can they be there in these quantities and no one knew it?"

'Now, you keep in mind, it wasn't one spectral analysis! It was two-and-a-half years of spectral analysis, running this material every day. And the man actually sent me away when they read because he could not believe it either. He worked on it another two months before he called me up and said, "Dave, you are right". That is how sceptical he was about it. He couldn't apologise to me. He is a German researcher with German pride, so he had his wife call and apologise to me.

'He was so impressed that he went back to Germany to the Institute of Spectroscopy. He was actually written up in the spectroscopic journals as having proven the existence of these elements in natural materials in the south-western United States. They're not the kind of journals that you and I would ever get to read, but I actually saw the journals and he was written up.

They had no idea where this stuff was coming from, how we were producing it, what concentrations we had gone through or anything. They had analysed just this small amount of powder. The crazy thing about it was that all we had done was to remove the silica and send the other stuff in

They were pretty unbelievable numbers. After we had come at this in every way we knew, in order to disprove it, I decided all we had to do was throw money at this problem, because money solves everything, right? So, at 69 seconds, I stopped the burn. I let the machine cool down and I took a pocket knife and dug that little bead out of the top of the electrode. When you shut off the arc, it absorbs down into the carbon and you have to dig down into the carbon to get the little bead of metal.

'So I sent this little bead of metal over to Harwell Laboratories near Oxford in England. They made a precious metal analysis of this bead. I got a report back: "No precious elements detected." Now this was one second before the palladium was supposed to start leaving. Yet, according to neutron activation, which analysed the nucleus itself, there were no precious elements detected. This made absolutely no sense at all. There had to be an explanation here. Either this material had been converted to another element or it was in a form that we didn't understand yet. So I decided I had to get more information on it.

'I went to a PhD analytical chemist, John Sickafoose, a man trained in separating and purifying individual elements out of unknown material. He was trained at Iowa State University and had a PhD in metal separation systems. He's the man that Motorola and Sperry used in the State of Arizona to handle their waste water problems. He has worked with all the rare earths, he has worked with all the man-made elements.

'He has physically separated everything on the periodic table with the exception of four elements. Coincidentally, I went to him to have him separate six elements; four of those were the elements he had never worked on. He said "You know, Mr Hudson, I have heard this story before. All my life and I'm a native Arizonan, too - I heard this story about these precious elements.

I am very impressed with the way you have gone about this, with the systematic way you have approached it. I cannot accept any money because if I accept money from you I have to write you a written report. All I have to sell is my reputation. All I have to sell is my credibility. I'm a certified expert witness in the state of Arizona in metallurgical separation systems."

'He said, "Dave, I will work for you for no charge until I can show you where you are wrong. When I can tell you where you are wrong, I'll give you a written report. Then you will pay me US$60 an hour for the time I spent." This would have come to about US$12,000 to US$15,000 dollars. If this got rid of the curse, if this just got the thing answered once and for all, it would be worth it. Do it, get on with it.

'Well, three years later, he said, "I can tell you it is not any of the other elements on the periodic table. We are educated; we are taught to do the chemical separation of the material and then send it for instrumental confirmation. The example I use is rhodium because it has a unique colour in the chloride solution. It is a cranberry colour, almost like the colour of grape juice. There is no other element that produces the same colour in chloride solution. When my rhodium was separated from all the other elements, it produced that colour of chloride.

The last procedure you do to separate the material out is to neutralise the acid solution, and it precipitates out of solution as a red-brown dioxide. It is heated under a controlled atmosphere to 800 degrees for an hour, and that creates the anhydrous dioxide. Then you hydro-reduce that under a controlled atmosphere to get the element, and then you anneal away the excess hydrogen.

'So, we neutralised the acid solution and precipitated it out as a red-brown dioxide, which is the colour it is supposed to precipitate out at. Then we filtered that out. We heated it under oxygen for an hour in a tube furnace, then we hydro-reduced it to this grey-white powder, exactly the colour rhodium should be as an element. Then we heated it up to 1,400 degrees under argon to anneal away the material, and it turned snow-white. Now this wasn't expected. This just isn't what is supposed to happen.

'What John did was, he said, 'Dave, I'm going to heat it to the anhydrous dioxide. I'm going to cool it down. I'm going to take one third of the sample and put it into a sealed vial.

 I'm going to put the rest of the sample back onto the tube furnace and heat it up under oxygen, cool it back down, purge it with inert gas, and heat it back up under hydrogen to reduce away the oxides.

"'The hydrogen reacts with the oxygen, forming water, and cleans the metal. I'll cool that down to the grey-white powder. I'll cool down that grey-white powder. I'll take half of that and put it into another sealed vial. I'll take the rest of the powder and put it back into the furnace. I'm going to oxidise it, hydro -reduce it and anneal it to the white powder. Then I will put it into a vial and send all three vials to Pacific Spectrochem over in Los Angeles, one of the best spectroscopic firms in the U.S."

'The first analysis came back: the red-brown dioxide was iron oxide. The next material came back: silica and aluminium: no iron present. Just putting hydrogen on the iron oxide had made the iron quit being iron, and now it had become silica and aluminium.

'Now, this was a big sample. We'd just made the iron turn into silica and aluminium. The snow-white annealed sample was analysed as calcium and silica. Where had the aluminium gone? John said, "Dave, my life was so simple before I met you. This makes absolutely no sense at all."

'He said, "What you are working with is going to cause them to rewrite physics books, rewrite chemistry books and come to a completely new understanding." John gave me the bill: it was US$130,000, which I paid. But he said, "Dave, I have separated it physically and I have checked it chemically 50 different ways. You have 4 to 6 ounces per ton of palladium, 12 to 14 ounces per ton of platinum, 150 ounces per ton of osmium, 250 ounces per ton of ruthenium, 600 ounces per ton of iridium, 800 ounces per ton of rhodium."

'These were almost the exact same numbers that the spectroscopist had told me were there. It was such an incredible number that John said, "Dave, I've got to go to the natural place where this stuff comes from and I've got to take my own samples."

'So he went up and actually walked the property and took his own samples, put them in a bag, brought them back to the laboratory, pulverised the entire sample and then started doing the analysis on what is called the master blend sample. This represents the whole geology, and he got the same numbers.

'We worked on this from 1983 until 1989, one PhD chemist, three master chemists, and two technicians working full-time. Using the Soviet Academy of Sciences' and the US Bureau of Standards' weights and measures information as a starting point, we literally learned how to do qualitative and quantitative separations of all these elements.

'We learned how to take commercial standards and make them disappear. We learned how to buy rhodium trichloride, as the metal, from Johnson, Matthey & Engelhardt and we learned how to break all these metal-metal bonding until it was literally a red solution but no rhodium was detectable. And it was nothing but pure rhodium from Johnson, Matthey & Engelhardt.

'We learned how to do it with iridium, we learned how to do it with gold, we learned how to do it with osmium, and we learned how to do it with ruthenium. This is what we found when we actually purchased a machine for high-pressure liquid chromatography.

'For your information, this person named John Sickafoose was the man who actually wrote his PhD thesis at Iowa State University on how to build this instrument back in 1963-64. After he graduated, some of the graduate students there took that technology and developed it, and eventually Dow Chemical came in and bought it.

'Dow went ahead and commercialised it, and now it is the most sophisticated chemical separation instrument that the world has. It's computer-controlled, all high-pressure, and you can do very precise separations with it. Because this is the man who conceptualised and designed it and told them what the limitations would eventually be on it, he was the ideal man to take the technology and perfect it.

'So we were able to use their basic technology and develop a separation system for the rhodium trichloride. We actually separated five different species in the commercial rhodium trichloride. The word "metal" is like the word "army". You can't have a one-man army. The word metal refers to a conglomerate material.

'It has certain properties: electrical conductivity, heat conduction, and all these other aspects. When you dissolve the metals in acid, you get a solution that is clear without solids. You assume it's a free-ion solution, but when you are dealing with noble elements they're still not free ions. It's what is called "cluster chemistry".

'Since the 1950s there has been a whole area of research in colleges on cluster chemistry and catalytic materials. But what happens is that the metal-metal bonds are still retained by the material. So, if you buy rhodium trichloride from Johnson, Matthey & Engelhardt, you are actually getting Rh12Cl36 or Rh15Cl45. You really aren't getting RhCl3. There is a difference between the metal-metal bonding material and the free ions. What you are buying is cluster chemistry; you are not getting free ions. When you put the material in for the instrumentation to analyse, it is actually the metal-metal bonds of the cluster that are analysed. The instrumentation is not really analysing the free ions.

'I heard that General Electric was building fuel cells using rhodium and iridium. So I made contacts with the fuel cell people back in Massachusetts and travelled there to meet with them. They had three attorneys meet with us, and the GE people were also there.

The attorneys were there to protect the GE people because a lot of people say they have technologies and they meet with them; then after the meeting they sue them, claiming that GE stole their technology. Then to defend themselves, GE has to divulge what their technology really is. So CE is very sceptical when you say that you have something new. They bring their high-faluting attorneys to really screen you.

'After about an hour they said, "These guys are for real. You attorneys can leave." That was because they had also had the explosions. They knew that when they buy the commercial rhodium trichloride it analyses very well. But to make it ready to go into their fuel cells they have to do salt effusions on it, where they melt the salt and put the metal in with it to disperse it further. They know that when they do that, the metal doesn't analyse as well any more. So when we told them we had material' that didn't analyse at all, they couldn't conceive how this was possible. They had never seen it, but they said, "We are interested".

'Now the GE are the people who build analytical instrumentation! They said, "Dave, why don't you just make a bunch of rhodium for us and send it to us and we'll mount it in our fuel-cell technology. We'll see if it works in places where only rhodium works. What is the mechanism of conversion of monatomic rhodium to metallic rhodium in these fuel cells? No other metal has ever been found which will perform the catalysis in the hydrogen-evolving technology of the fuel cell, other than rhodium and platinum. And rhodium is unique compared to platinum because rhodium does not poison with carbon monoxide and platinum does.

'They said, "Dave, we'll just run it to see if it's a hydrogen evolving catalyst and, if it is, then we will see if it is carbon monoxide-stable and, if it is, then it's rhodium or it's a rhodium alternative."

'So we worked for about six months and refined that amount of material and we re-refined it and re-refined it. We wanted to be absolutely sure that this was really clean stuff. We didn't want any problems with this. We sent it back to Tony LaConti at GE. GE, who by that time had sold their fuel-cell technology. All the GE fuel-cell people had gone to work for United Technologies, and, since United Technologies already had their in-house people, the GE people were not integrated into the existing teams. So all the GE people were junior people; they weren't senior any more. After a certain period of months they all quit and left United Technologies.

'Well, Jose Giner, who was the head of fuel-cells at United Technologies, also quit and went to set up his own firm, called Giner Incorporated, in Waltham, Massachusetts. Tony and all the GE people went with him. By the time our material got there, they'd set up their own company in Waltham, so we contracted with them to build the fuel cells for us.

'When our material was sent to them, the rhodium, as received, was analysed as not having any rhodium in it. Yet when they mounted it on carbon in their fuel-cell technology and ran the fuel cell for several weeks, it worked and did what only rhodium would do, and it was carbon monoxide-stable. After three weeks, they shut down the fuel cells, took out the electrodes and sent them back to the same place that said there was no rhodium in the original sample.

'Now there was over 8 per cent rhodium in the original sample. What happened was it had begun to nucleate on the carbon! It actually had begun to grow metal-metal bonds! So now there was metallic rhodium showing on the carbon, where before there was no rhodium.


'These GE people said, "Dave if you are the first one to discover this, if you are the first one to explain how to make it in this form, if you are the first one to tell the world that it exists, then you can get a patent on this." I said, "I'm not interested in patenting this." Then they told me that if someone else discovered it and patented it, even though I was using it every day, they could stop me from doing it. I said, "Well, maybe I should patent it."

'So in March 1988, we filed US and worldwide patents on Orbital Rearranged Monatomic Elements. Now that is a mouthful, so, to make it short, we called it ORMEs. You have ORMEs gold, ORMEs palladium, ORMEs iridium, ORMEs ruthenium, ORMEs osmium. While we were doing this patent procedure, the Patent Office said, "Dave, we need more precise data, we need more exact data, we need more information about this conversion to this white powder state."

'One of the problems we had was that when you make this white powder and you bring it out into the atmosphere, it really starts gaining weight. I'm not talking about a little bit of weight, I'm talking about 20 to 30 per cent. Now that normally would be called absorption of atmospheric gases: the air is reacting with it and causing weight gain, but not 20 to 30 per cent.

'Nonetheless, we had to answer the Patent Office. We had to come up with exact data for the Patent Office. So what we did was use this machine for thermogravimetric analysis. This is a machine that has total atmospheric control of the sample. You can oxidise it, hydro-reduce it, and anneal it, while continually weighing the sample under a controlled atmosphere. Everything is all sealed. We were getting short of funding and couldn't afford to buy one, so we leased one from the Bay Area from Varian Corporation. They sent it in to us and we set it up on computer controls.

'We heated the material at 1.2 degrees per minute and cooled it at 2 degrees per minute. What we found was that when you oxidise the material, it weighs 102 per cent; when you hydro-reduce it, it weighs 103 per cent. So far, so good. No problem. But, when it turns snow white, it weighs 56 per cent! Now that's impossible!

When you anneal it and it turns white, it only weighs 56 per cent of the beginning weight! If you put that on a silica test boat and you weigh it, it weighs 56 per cent! If you heat it to the point that it fuses into the glass, it turns black and all the weight returns. So the material hadn't volatilised away. It was still there. It just couldn't be weighed any more.

'That's when everybody said, "This just isn't right; it can't be!" Do you know that we heated it, and cooled it, and heated it and cooled it, and heated it and cooled it under helium or argon? When we tooled it, it would weigh 300 to 400 per cent of its beginning weight; when we heated it, it would actually weigh less than nothing? If it wasn't in the pan, the pan would weigh more than the pan weighs when this stuff is in it! Keep in mind, these are highly trained people running this instrumentation, and they would come in and say, "Take a look at this. This makes no sense at all"

'Now, this machine is so precisely designed and controlled that they have a magnetic material they can put into this that is non-magnetic when it goes into the machine but at 300 degrees it becomes magnetic. It is in fact a strong magnet. Then, after you get up to 900 degrees, it loses its magnetism. You can actually see if the interaction of the magnetism with the magnetic field of the heating element causes any change in weight.

'The heating element is bifilar-wound. This means that it goes round and round the sample; then you reverse it and wind it right back up so all the current runs against itself all the time. So when a wire flows electricity there is a magnetic field that forms around it, but when you run the wire right next to it, going in the other direction, it forms a magnetic field in the other direction. The idea is that the two fields will cancel. This is the kind of wiring that is used in television to cancel all the magnetic fields. The designers of this machine wanted to eliminate the magnetic field aspect here.

'When we put the magnetic material in the sample and ran it in the machine, there was no response at all. There was no change in weight when the material became magnetic or lost its magnetism. Yet when our material was put in there and it turned white, it went to 56 per cent of its beginning weight. If you shut off the machine and let it cool, it was exactly 56 per cent. If you heated it, it would go less than nothing, and if you cooled it, it would go 300 to 400 per cent, but it always went back to a steady 56 per cent.

'We contacted Varian in the Bay Area and said, "Look, this just doesn't make any sense. There's something wrong with this machine; something isn't right. Every time we use the machine it works fine unless we make the pure monatomic material, and when we do, it turns snow-white and doesn't work correctly any more." Varian looked over our results and said, "You know, Mr Hudson, if you were working with the cooling of the material we would say it is super-conducting. But inasmuch as you are heating the material, we don't know what you've got."

'I decided, well, I have had to learn chemistry and I've had to learn physics, and now I've got to learn the physics of super-conductors. So I bought and borrowed a bunch of graduate books on super-conductivity and I began to read about super-conductors.'

'Evidently there are several phenomena which occur. We hooked a voltmeter (used for checking circuitry) up to the white powder expecting the needle to leap across the voltmeter because this was supposed to be perfect conductivity, but nothing happened. Instead of this being a perfect conductor of electricity it's a perfect insulator.

'So we went back to the book for more information, and discovered that super-conductivity by definition will not allow any voltage potential to exist inside the sample. Now to get the electricity off the wire and into the sample takes a voltage potential, likewise to get electricity out of the sample and on to the wire needs a voltage potential.

'Yet by definition a super-conductor does not allow any voltage potential to exist in the sample. So we thought, what good is this? But what you learn is that you must resonance frequency tune the vibration frequency of the electron wave, until the vibrational frequency of the electron wave is perfectly matched with the vibrational frequency wave of the super-conductor.

'Then the electrons will go on with no push at all because they are seeking the path of least resistance and that is in the super-conductor. When you do get them matched up, a strange thing happens when they go onto the super-conductor; the electrons pair up. They don't go on as individual electrons they go on in pairs! They go on as light.

'Now a curious thing happens, an electron has mass and it exists in space-time, you cannot have two electrons in the same space-time, it won't happen. They exist in different places and locations, but when they pair up and become light you can put billions of them in the same space-time.

'So now what happens with a super-conductor, as long as the frequency electron wave matches the frequency of the super -conductor, is that they keep going onto the super-conductor, more and more and more and more, you don't have to take them off, because they are going on as light. And the only way you know they are in there is by checking the size of the Meissner that forms around the super-conductor.

'So what is a Meissner? Well, when electricity flows through a wire it produces a magnetic field around the wire, but with a super-conductor it produces what they call a Meissner. The cool thing about this is that it does not produce a north and south pole. It's a null field. A super-conductor has no resistance, so you could keep putting energy into it, to the point where it has so much Meissner around it that it becomes larger and larger, because of all the electrons and amperage.

'It will then begin to float on the Earth's magnetic field. It will cause the Earth's magnetic field to travel around it; it will not enter into the sample. It will become stuck in the magnetic field it is sitting in. To a point, you can put, as much energy in a super-conductor as you like, before it becomes HCL, which is a critical mass where as it becomes so huge it collapses and becomes normal. You don't want to be around when this happens.

'To get the energy out of a super-conductor you put the wire up to it and resonance frequency tune the vibration frequency of the wire to match the super-conductor and apply a voltage potential and it comes out. The neat thing is you can make a super-conductor that say runs from Tampa to San Francisco and you can resonance frequency tune the energy, put it in the super-conductor here, and it will get a free ride all the way to San Francisco. All these atoms in perfect resonance harmony producing a quantral wave, and the energy gets on this wave' system and has a free ride all the way to San Francisco.'

At this point, while David goes on to talk about the possibility of floating trains, which they already have in Japan but which work by using opposing magnetic fields, I was imagining a huge egg-shaped craft with Dave's super conductive powder sandwiched in-between an outer skin with people inside ready to go to Australia at the speed of light. Because if Earth's gravitational field has no effect on the occupants because of the Meissner, speed would not be a problem. Perhaps even to the Moon and beyond. Travel would become so quick and easy.

 David continued:

'In March 1988 we filed worldwide patents and US on Orbital Rearranged Monatomic Elements, ORMES. Each element had individual patents. You can imagine the patent office when we tried to patent gold, oh great, who are these guys? Then I filed another set of patents on the super-conductive state. Which is a resonance couple system of quantum oscillators, so there had to be a many atom state of ORMES so we had to can it S- ORMES. The super-conducting state.

'You can have a patent on the atom but you also have to have a patent on the systems of atoms. It's like a man being an army, a man can't be an army, a one-man army isn't real, an army is many men. Well a super-conductor is many atoms, you can't have one atom being a super-conductor. So we had to have a patent on ORMES and a patent on S-ORMES.

   'Well I didn't know that the law said that any patent involving super-conductivity has to have the approval of the Department of Defence, because of the strategic interest of the government. I didn't know this, so I just went ahead and filed the patent. Well, the Department of Defence didn't get involved. I only used the word super-conductivity once in the closing paragraph on the summary page of my patent application.

'I said it has horns, it has four hooves, it moos, it gives milk, it has baby calves, but I didn't use the word cow. I talked about the Meissner, its reaction with gravity (the levitation), but I didn't use the word super-conductivity except one time in the closing paragraph. So they never realised it was a super conducting patent.

'By law you have one year's grace, from when you file a US patent, to file a worldwide patent. So I waited until about three weeks before the end of the year, and contacted the patent office and told them I'm going to file a worldwide patent. Evidently, someone at the patent office re-read my patent application again and said, "Oh gosh it's about super-conductivity."

'Off to the Department of Defence it went, back it came and it said, "He cannot file worldwide". Then I went back to them and said, "Wait, by law I have a six month appeal period, I've only got three weeks. So they over-rode the Department of Defence, and let me file worldwide.

'Now needless to say by now my name was mud at the Department of Defence. Next, I get a phone call from this guy out of the blue, who wants to invest in my technology. I said, "How did you hear about this?' he said, "Well, everybody's talking about it"

'Anyhow, he's telling me about things that nobody should know, he's quoting specific references out of my patent, and nobody is supposed to have seen this, except the patent office and the military review board. So I had a private investigator check him out; I said "Find out who he is and where he comes from."

'We found out he flies out of Langley air force base, he gets his money from a Swiss bank account that the military keeps stocked with money and his job is to provide money to companies whose technologies they need for Star Wars. When they took this legislation to the legislator here in the United States, they turned it down. They didn't allow funding money for Star Wars.

     'So what the military does is put money in Swiss bank accounts that nobody knows about, and this investor goes around looking for companies that need support and when he finds them he funnels money into those companies.'

He said to Dave, 'I've got to have this stuff, because the only way you're going to get absolute confirmation that no one will question, is to have it show that it reflects neutrons.' He went on to say, 'I can get you on line for this in a couple of weeks, whereas it will take you three years.' Dave said, 'Then I'll wait three years.'

He said, 'Dave, have you ever taken this to a university and had university funding or government funding or grants of any kind?' Dave said, 'no'. There was just no way they could get involved with him legally. Dave said, 'he came back to me a couple of times and then gave up'. There was no way he could make Dave do anything. He could see he was totally private and there was nothing he could do.

   When you understand that this produces gamma radiation, the last thing you need is the military having this information.

However, before they let Dave go to patent pending in the US, the military had to approve it. They told him, 'You must get this confirmed by a totally independent laboratory, someone who has no affiliation with you, someone with credentials.' So he told them how about Argon National Laboratories. Were they good enough?

'Yes they're a government laboratory,' they said. 'OK, so we'll have it done by them,' Dave said. So they said, 'Here's what we want you to do, we want you to buy pure yellow gold, 999.99 per cent pure gold, and convert it into white powder, and if you can do that, we'll let your material patent application go to patent pending.'

So Dave went to the Argon National Laboratories and met with Roger Popel, Head of Ceramics and Super-conductivity. When Dave told him his whole story, he said, 'we have physicists here at the national labs that have theorised that the very elements you are telling us should, do this. We know this already. We just don't have anybody who can make them into that state. We're making them one atom at a time in the nuclear facility and know they exist in this state, but making them one at a time it's going to take years and years to produce enough to evaluate it as a super-conductor.'

So he was very excited about it. He wrote it all up and submitted to the Argon National Laboratories, and their attorneys turned it down. Because, they said, 'It involves chemistry and it can be done without the government lab's involvement. You can go to a private lab to get this done, and our very purpose for existence was to do things that you couldn't get done at a private lab.'

Dave said, 'Roger, the problem is if you don't make the white powder, how do you know it's gold, because you have no machine that will confirm it's gold?' What I have to have is, 'You take gold and change it into white powder so you know it came from gold.' He said 'I see your point Dave, it is a problem isn't it?' He said, 'I'll tell you what, there are two guys who used to work here, I know them personally, I socialise with them, I go places at the weekend with them, I know them real well. I'll write to them, and tell them I want them to make this white powder for you. I know them well enough that, if they say it came from gold, I will accept it as coming from gold.'

So he sent Dave to Mike McNallon and Steve Daniluck over there at High Tech. They told Dave they would do the work for $20,000. They bought the yellow gold, and using his procedure made the white powder. And they acknowledged they didn't know where this stuff came from, because it doesn't analyse to be gold, it doesn't have the properties of gold, but it came out of gold.

So David provided the affidavit to the patent office, all signed sealed and notarised. Now it goes to the Department of Defence and they say, That's not enough, now we want to know how you take the white powder and change it back to the yellow metal, gold'. Dave said, 'You must understand this is a materials patent not a procedural patent for the white powder, I was patenting the white powder. I showed them how to make the white powder from a known material, I made an apple into apple sauce, now they wanted me to make the apple sauce into an apple.'

David told them, I can do it, but I don't think I want to tell you how to do it.' What it boiled down to was they wanted as much information as possible from him before they gave him the patent. If they got that piece of the puzzle they would know exactly how this phenomenon works. They would get this stuff and put it into lasers and learn how to energise those with OCR and help produce gamma radiation. And that's a weapon you don't want Gadaffi having, or Hussein, or the military. It will go through brick walls and lead; it will kill everybody in the building but not harm the building. It is a very dangerous material, and no one should mess with it.

So in 1993 David Hudson quit pursuing the patent. The attorney said, 'They never can grant a patent to anyone else that will ever apply for yours, because you applied for it and got turned down.' David said that was all he wanted anyway. So after the expenditure of $540,000 he stopped pursuing the patents. So anyone who is searching for his patents and not finding them that's the reason why, all you'll find is 'patent applied for'. David was financially strapped by then, as it was costing a hell of a lot to maintain the patents. He coupled this with the assurance that they could never issue another patent to anyone on his patent, and said, 'Drop it, don't let us pursue it anymore.'

In 1994 his uncle came to him with a book and said, 'This book talks about white powdered gold.' Dave said, 'Oh really I got a white powdered gold and nobody will allow me a patent on it.' His uncle said, 'Dave it's a book on alchemy,' Dave said, 'I'm really not interested in alchemy. I'm a dirt farmer trying to get credibility in physics and chemistry and you bring me a book on alchemy. I'm really not interested in alchemy. Alchemy is when the Church were involved, this is the occult, I'm not interested in that stuff.'

His uncle said, But Dave, it talks about a white powder gold, it even talks about gold glass.' Dave said, 'And they are right, it does look like gold glass, it looks clear, it just looks white to the naked eye. But if you heat it in a vacuum at 1,160 degrees it will fuse to a pure glass, it's very brittle, but it will grind back down to the white powder. But it is glass.' Dave was amazed to learn that it talked about this in the alchemy text. It also talked about it being the main container of the essence of life.

'Well, we once said that when we have the analytical method this stuff could be anywhere,' Dave continued. 'Like a stealth atom it could be in anything and no one would know it. So one of the first things we did was to go to Safeways and buy some cow and pigs brains and take them to the laboratories and put them in fuming sulphuric acid and carbonise them, and then oxidise away the carbon and do a metal sulphate analysis on the residue.

'And we found that over 5 per cent of the dry matter weight in the brain was made up of rhodium and iridium in the high spin state, and nobody knows it. Then we read this text that says it's the container of the essences of life. I thought, gosh is this possible that this is the same white powder that they are talking about? So I began to do medical studies with it. Now I've done physics, chemistry, super-conductivity, quantum mechanics, and now I'm into medicine.

'I went to a doctor and I told him the stories about it, and he began to administer the white powder to a dog. This dog was a golden retriever who had an abscess, valley fever and tick fever. No medicine they had could cure this animal, nothing would work.

They injected 1 milligram, 1 cc in the tumour on his side, 1 cc intravenously and after a week and a half everything has gone away, and the dog's feeling great. One milligram! That's nothing. That's so small you can barely see it. However, after a week it began to grow back. So they began to inject the dog again, but this time they kept it going for about two weeks and it never came back.'

Then, without telling Dave at the time, the doctor began to give it to an HIV patient. The HIV patient was literally so weak he could not eat or speak. He was on his deathbed being fed by IV every two days. The doctor injected 2 milligrams of the powder into his IV After a week and a half, he is getting dressed on his own, he's eating on his own, and he's thrown away the IV lines, and they have to inject directly into his arm. In a month and a half he's on a plane flying back home to Indiana to attend a family wedding and shaking hands with everybody. They don't even know he's HIV positive.

'You do not get spontaneous remission from HIV. With some cancers you may from time to time, but not with HIV. The doctor was very impressed. So impressed he went on to treat a man who had carposious sarcoma, they are cancers that travel all over your body on the skin. This fellow had 30 lesions over his body. So he injected him with 2 milligram a day and in a month and a half the lesions were totally gone. When the lesions were dry you could literally just rub them away. You may get a slight discolouration where they have been, but the lesions just go. That's with just 2 milligrams a day.'

Dave puts special emphasis on the fact that they were using white powder, made of rhodium and iridium and not gold. Because they discovered that was already in the body, they thought that's what they'd start with. 'Doctors have worked on patients with cancers, ALS, MD, MS, pancreatic cancers, and liver cancers. They have done some experimentation with brain cancers. And one of the things they find is, when the dead tissue of the cancer actually begins to turn to healthy tissue, the cancer appears to get larger, and that's the opening up of the cancer. If you have brain turn ours there is a size limitation, you don't necessarily want to use this material so you may want some other way of treating it initially.'

This remarkable material is now being evaluated by the alternative medicine division of the National Institute of Health in New York City and many other places throughout the United States. And data is being developed on the information discovered. So not only are we talking about a new form of patent, we're talking about a room temperature super conductor that super-conducts up to 800 degrees. The implications for many areas of science are immense.

Then to find out that it is a natural constituent of your body and that it literally flows the light of life around your body. People have actually confirmed that there is super conductivity in your body. The US Navy researchers have measured super-conductivity in your body. What they don't know is what is super-conducting, because it's like some stealth atom that they can't identify. And they're right, that's exactly what it is. It's a higher form of matter that they're not aware of.'

While most scientists today wouldn't know what David Hudson is talking about, some must see its possibilities. Through David's work we now have the ability to take the next step towards free energy. The problem I now see is that scientists themselves will not like the idea that a dirt farmer is able to tell them where they went wrong. And will not want to lose face by having to study work that has gone on outside the scientific fraternity. I hope in the near future to use David's material to heal a friend who has MS. The outcome of this I will make public knowledge so that others can try. I do not intend to let his findings slip away into oblivion.

Through the stress of his work on reaching a conclusion with the white powder, plus government trying to close a factory where he was just starting to try and make the material, David suffered a heart attack and has had a triple by-pass. His doctor and his family are advising him to take things easy, so it is going to be difficult for him to continue with his good work. Many people - myself included - have offered to help, and hopefully when he is better he will accept. Surely we can't get this close to the answer to all our dreams only to walk away.




Alan Watt Exposed - avoids talking about Zionists

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8gmLIqw6CJQ

Tony Brown

Published on Dec 13, 2015

SUBSCRIBE 123

Unlike his normal polite behaviour, Alan now gets agitated, continually interrupts, the caller disappears, and finally Mr Watt makes him out to be a nuisance. Whatever you take from it, know Alan doesn't want to have an open discussion. He's controlled. Source (from 24m-40s) http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.ne...



Alan Watt ripped off Glen Kealey - Cutting Through the Matrix

 

Alan Watt ripped off Glen Kealey - Cutting Through the Matrix




The Hidden Hand of the Rothschild () Banking Family

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4U49nYnd4Xc


Robert Sepehr

Published on Sep 14, 2016

SUBSCRIBE 87K

The Rothschild family is a wealthy family descending from Mayer Amschel Rothschild, a court Jew to the German Landgraves of Hesse-Kassel, in the Free City of Frankfurt, who established his banking business in the 1760s. The Balfour Declaration was a letter dated 2 November 1917 from the United Kingdom's Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild, a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland. It read: "His Majesty's government view with favors the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country." The text of the letter was published in the press one week later, on 9 November 1917. The "Balfour Declaration" was later incorporated into both the Sèvres peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire, and the Mandate for Palestine. The original document is kept at the British Library. Thank you for the support! https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5703352


 

Jen Reviews

 100 Best Things to do in Singapore

  by Jen Miller
   See more at Jen Reviews

https://www.jenreviews.com/best-things-singapore/

This tropical island located at the southernmost tip of peninsula Malaysia is a vibrant modern city-state.

The city brings its best in food, nature, heritage, and culture to punch well above its weight on the global tourist map.

  • 1. Visit the Gardens by the Bay Cloud Forest (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 2. Visit the Flower Dome at Gardens by the Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 3. Night-time stroll across the Supertree Grove (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 4. Visit the National Orchid garden (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 5. Visit Jurong Bird Park (Jurong-Clementi)
  • 6. Visit the S.E.A aquarium at Marine Life Park (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 7. Visit the Singapore Zoo (Sembawang)
  • 8. Visit the River Safari (Holland-Bukit Panjang)
  • 9. Immerse in art at National Gallery Singapore (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 10. Trek through Southern Ridges (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 11. Gardener’s Day Out at Hort Park (Jurong-Clementi)
  • 12. Walk the Labrador Nature reserve (West Coast)
  • 13. Day out at Universal Studios Singapore (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 14. Take a spiritual journey into Buddha Tooth Relic Temple (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 15. Sungei Buloh Wetlands tour (Chua Chu Kang)
  • 16. Picnic at Marina Barrage Green Roof (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 17. Visit the National Museum of Singapore (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 18. Night-time dining at the Singapore Flyer (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 19. Swim at the top of the world at Marina Bay Infinity Pool (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 20. Afternoon Sailing at the Marina Reservoir (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 21. Visit the Southern Islands (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 22. Pulau Ubin Chek Jawa wetlands tour (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 23. Get a bird’s eye view from a cable car (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 24. Wonder Full light show at Marina Bay Sands (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 25. Catch a night-time live performance at Esplanade Outdoor Theatre (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 26. Tour the Asian Civilisations Museum (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 27. Cycle along Eastern Coastal Park Connector Network (ECPCN) Cycling Trail (East Coast-Fengshan)
  • 28. Hike Bukit Timah Nature Reserve (Holland-Bukit Panjang)
  • 29. Ginger Garden trail at Singapore Botanic Gardens (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 30. Explore the Evolution Garden at Singapore Botanic Gardens (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 31. Colonial history trail at Fort Canning Park (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 32. Dive into Chinatown’s Pagoda Street (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 33. Sightseeing cruise along the Singapore River (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 34. Visit the Future World exhibit at Art Science Museum (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 35. Visit the Sun Yat Sen Nanyang Memorial Hall (Bishan-Toa Payoh)
  • 36. Visit Sultan mosque at Kampong Glam
  • 37. Tour the Peranakan Museum (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 38. Explore Little India’s Serangoon Road (Jalan Besar)
  • 39. Dive into Kampong Glam (Jalan Besar)
  • 40. Relive history at The Battle Box (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 41. Fullerton monument tour (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 42. Indoor Skydiving at IFly Singapore (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 43. Visit the Civilian War Memorial Park (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 44. Heritage trail along Ann Siang and Telok Ayer (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 45. Explore Haw Par Villa (Jurong-Clementi)
  • 46. Relive your childhood at MINT Museum of Toys (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 47. Get high with Tiger Sky Tower (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 48. Learn about organic farming at Bollywood Veggies (Chua Chu Kang)
  • 49. Discover a heartland gem – Shuang Lin Monastery (Bishan-Toa Payoh)
  • 50. Architectural tour of The Esplanade (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 51. Have a fun-filled day at MegaZip Adventure Park (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 52. Explore Fort Siloso (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 53. Visit the Singapore Philatelic Museum (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 54. Visit Singapore’s oldest Hokkien temple – Thian Hock Keng Temple (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 55. Day out at Gardens By the Bay East Garden (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 56. Experience the nightlife scene at Chijmes (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 57. Explore the Bohemian enclave Holland village at night (Holland-Bukit Panjang Town Council)
  • 58. Visit Nagore Durgha Shrine (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 59. Explore the Dragonfly and Kingfisher Lakes at Gardens by the Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 60. Watch the exciting Formula One night race at the Marina Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 61. Art sculpture tour at Gardens by the Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 62. Explore the history of the overseas Chinese community at Chinese Heritage Centre (Jurong-Clementi Town Council)
  • 63. Shop along Orchard Road (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 64. Visit St Andrew’s Cathedral in the city (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 65. Visit Bukit Batok Town Park (Chua Chu Kang)
  • 66. Explore the world of art at Singapore Art museum (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 67. Food hunt at Maxwell Food centre (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 68. Pay your respects to wartime heroes at Kranji War Memorial (Chua Chu Kang)
  • 69. Science out at Singapore Science Centre (Jurong-Clementi)
  • 70 Visit the Kwan Im Thong Hood Cho Temple (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 71. Arts trail at Gardens by the Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 72. Visit Sri Veeramakaliamman temple (Jalan Besar)
  • 73. Explore the Peranakan neighbourhood – Joo Chiat
  • 74. Sightseeing kayak expedition around Marina Reservoir (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 75. Hike through the “Venice of Punggol” – Punggol Waterway Park (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 76. Visit Coney Island Park (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 77. MacRitchie reservoir TreeTop walk (Bishan-Toa Payoh)
  • 78. Feast on Satay at Lau Pa Sat Satay Street (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 79. Catch the Wings of Time show at Siloso Beach (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 80. Explore Bugis Village (Jalan Besar)
  • 81. Go surfing at Wave House Sentosa (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 82. Visit the Jurong Lake Gardens (Jurong-Clementi)
  • 83. Cycling at Ketam Mountain Bike Park at Pulau Ubin (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 84. Watch Teochew opera at Pulau Ubin (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 85. Chill out at Lantern Rooftop bar at Fullerton Bay Hotel (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 86. Evening out at Clarke Quay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 87. Tour the Singapore Sports Hub (Jalan Besar)
  • 88. Go up to the Sentosa Merlion (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 89. Day out at Palawan Beach (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 90. Walk along the Changi Point Coastal Walk (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 91. Visit the skybridge at The Pinnacle@Duxton (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 92. Visit the Raffles Hotel (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 93. Explore Singapore Changi Airport (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 94. Sampan ride at Marina Bay Sands (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 95. Food hunt at Makansutra’s Gluttons Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 96. Camping at Changi Beach Park (Pasir Ris-Punggol)
  • 97. Catch a live performance at Victoria Theatre Concert Hall (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 98. Waterfront promenade walk at Marina Bay (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 99. Watch the Singapore Symphony Orchestra Classics in the Park (Tanjong Pagar)
  • 100. Catch the sunrise at Merlion Park (Tanjong Pagar)



Glen Kealey - Workshop #1

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gl8Bk176B_o


Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on 28 Oct 2012

Freemasonry was the first organized religion. They fabricated all the other religions that came after. They invented Gods, Lucifer, Angels and all that crap in order to dumb-down the masses. It sure has worked, if one goes by the number of people who now defend their right to abandon the use of their brains. The definition of FAITH is ..."to believe in some implausible premiss no matter how much evidence there is to the contrary", ie: BRAINDEAD.


25 UNBELIEVABLE Things Found On Earth We Can't Explain

3,915,457 views

There are unbelievable things found on Earth that we simply can’t explain. Some people have claimed that some of these things come from aliens. Others believe them to be an elaborate hoax. But no matter how you look at them, they remain as some of the most mysterious discoveries made on our planet. Check out these 25 unbelievable things found on Earth we can’t explain. We discover new things on our planet all the time. These discoveries help shed light on the people that lived thousands of years ago. However, some of these discoveries are so bizarre and seem so out of place within their time, that some scientists are completely baffled as to their origin. Take a look at these unbelievable things found on Earth (and our photo credits and sources) and let us know in the comments below what you think are the answers to some of the mysteries surrounding these objects: https://list25.com/25-unbelievable-th... SUBSCRIBE - http://bit.ly/2uwq6BJ Follow us on: List25 Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/list25 List25 Instagram: https://instagram.com/list25/ List25 Twitter - https://twitter.com/list25 List25 Pinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/list25/ See more lists on our website: http://list25.com Have you heard of the Ruins of Atlit Yam? Discovered in 1984, these ruins are completely submerged underwater. How they ended up underwater is a complete mystery. Then there are the Ubaid Lizardmen. These are statues of lizard people that have mysterious origins. Probably one of the most bizarre discoveries is the Atacama Skeleton, a human skeleton only measuring 6 inches! How is that even possible? Scientists still don’t know. Check out these and the rest of these 25 unbelievable things found on Earth we can’t explain. If you enjoyed our video, you’ll enjoy these videos as well: 25 AMAZING Underwater Discoveries That Left Us Speechless - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zPVzD... 25 MYSTERIOUS Archaeological Discoveries That No One Can Explain - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n7xnh... Music: Impact Moderato by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/...) Source: http://incompetech.com/music/royalty-... Artist: http://incompetech.com/



 
   Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl


 

 

   GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.1

   Jerd Guillaume-Sam

    Published on March  5, 2009

  FREEMASONRY HAS HAD MANY NAMES~! ALTHOUGH FREEMASONRY HAS USED MANY THOUSANDS OF NAMES OVER NUMEROUS CENTURIES AN EASILY DEFINABLE COMMON THREAD       LINKS THEM ALL TO~GET~HER! Freemasonry is "a war to the death against thinking women and those men who support them", which is being fought covertly by the descendants of the first Pedophile Predator Priests from    the "Land of Punt", who were banned from participation in the affairs of Matrial Clan Society, some 60,000 years ago. Since then, they have by means of a step-by-step conspiracy, lied about world history, divided humans in     order to conquer and destroyed the credibility of women as long range nurturers and planners; convinced some braindead men that they should themselves lead a new patriarchal elitist system (based on the works of Socrates,       Plato and Aristotle), while in fact taking over the management of world affairs themselves under the cover of secret societies governed at the top, symbolically, by "men who wear dresses in public" (ie: Kings, Politicians, Priests,    Judges, Lawyers, Doctors, Scientists, Arab Emirs, Scots and selected University Professors and Graduates ~ MBA, PHD and LLD). These Priest-Hoods have destroyed the paradise that was here long ago and now infest our   word boxes with their confusing variety of languages (6000) and criminal financial system that rewards thieves and idiots. Isn't it time that we woke-up to these little known facts and respond appropriately.



 Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl



GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT 2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PVKrepZs-vI

Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 7, 2009

SUBSCRIBE 1.2K

From Here 2 Eternity~! Life begins Green, at 40. Power is Red, at 55. Putrification is Yellow, at 70. Wait until you're 81 and then you will be replaced by 99. The Philosopher's Stone and the Holy Graal came to us from the Pyrenees, from those who have "seen fire". These would be the Benedictines and their cut-outs the Cistercians and Cluniacs. They are responsible for your "voice box invasion". They created all modern languages beginning with Horite Abyssinian which is now called Basque/Vasco. Everytime you o~pen your mouth to speak, or move your hand to write, you unknowingly "will~their~will"! Low Priests are Pedophiles while High Priests are on MUSHROOMS. In reality Masonry began in 58800BC with the eviction of "Pedophiles" from Matriarchal Clan Society. These predators established the first "Priest~hood" and declared their eviction "the Original Sin". The Priests vowed revenge against women and original peoples. By the end of the last Ice Age they were ready to put their plan for a New World Order, a Patriarchal Society, to work. This is when they "Freed" a large number of Genetically Modified Masons (Caucasians) to work on Human Engineering; thereby fabricating FREE~MASONRY! Today we are at the End Times of this plan-ET called 8.0 and await the "RISING" of UBERMENSCH, Beyondman, Overman or Superman, whatever ONE (UN in French) wishes to call the cloned HERMAPHRODITE they have now fabricated to take us forward from here into eternity. Freemasonry was re-organized in the 12th century, in order to complete the take-over of Europe by the Priest~Hoods, and then, to establish a base in North America (the monk Serra in CaliPHornia). Shriner Pilgrims were then mandated to locate 13 colonies on the east coast which would forever be controlled through French priests, in Quebec Canada and Basque priests, in Mexico. The American priests located in Boston while the hoods set up in Nevada. They all swear their vows of allegiance to the "Cult of the Virgin"; UBERMENSCH, the male Hermaphrodite.

 


The End of South Africa. Prepare Yourself


Stefan Molyneux

Published on Aug 21, 2018

️ Donate Now: http://www.freedomainradio.com/donate ️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: http://www.fdrurl.com/newsletter South Africa has moved forward with plans to expropriate white-owned farm land, with little to no compensation or due process, in a move which will doom the country to future catastrophe. Stefan Molyneux looks at historical examples of similar situations and outlines the disastrous consequences of President Cyril Ramaphosa's foolhardy endeavor. Human Intelligence (IQ) | The Experts Interview Series https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list... South Africa Coverage Playlist https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list... Your support is essential to Freedomain Radio, which is 100% funded by viewers like you. Please support the show by making a one time donation or signing up for a monthly recurring donation at: http://www.freedomainradio.com/donate ️ 1. Donate: http://www.freedomainradio.com/donate ️ 2. Newsletter Sign-Up: http://www.fdrurl.com/newsletter ️ 3. On YouTube: Subscribe, Click Notification Bell ️ 4. Subscribe to the Freedomain Podcast: http://www.fdrpodcasts.com ️ 5. Follow Freedomain on Alternative Platforms �� Bitchute: http://bitchute.com/stefanmolyneux �� Minds: http://minds.com/stefanmolyneux �� Steemit: http://steemit.com/@stefan.molyneux �� Gab: http://gab.ai/stefanmolyneux �� Twitter: //www.twitter.com/stefanmolyneux �� Facebook: //facebook.com/stefan.molyneux �� Instagram: http://instagram.com/stefanmolyneux Amazon Affiliate Links ️ US: http://www.fdrurl.com/Amazon ️ Canada: http://www.fdrurl.com/AmazonCanada ️ UK: http://www.fdrurl.com/AmazonUK



100 Best Things to do in New York

by J Rogers

Your RVF Lifestyle

RV Road Trip

RV-ing around the world

RV Road Trip

https://www.your-rv-lifestyle.com/best-things-to-do-in-new-york/

The state of New York is in the north-eastern part of the USA. It is the fourth most populated state in the USA. The largest city is New York City where there is a population of over 8.55 million. You will find a diverse geography here, with mountains and oceans, rivers and lakes.

There are many interesting landmarks throughout the state including some of the most visited places in the world. There are over 200 colleges and universities in the state, some of which have been ranked in the top 40 in the world.

Cuisine is vastly different in every area you visit, depending on the culture of the inhabitants. Be prepared to try different types of food, and explore the many places in the state. Don’t be afraid to ask questions – New Yorkers will gladly tell you all about their state!

1. Central Park

You will find this park in Manhattan. It covers over 843 acres and is the most visited park in the USA, drawing an amazing 40 million visitors each year. It has also been the subject of more movies than any other location in the world.

Pack a picnic lunch, or buy some local cuisine, and spend an afternoon here. Who knows who you will see! You may even get to watch a movie being made!

2. One World Observatory

This observatory is in Manhattan, and you will find it in the tallest building in the western hemisphere. The observatory is on the 100th floor, and can be reached via the ‘Sky Pod’ elevator which will get you up there in just 60 seconds.

There is an interactive tour which is highly recommended. You will be able to see videos of the building of the tower, along with learning about the history of the city.
At the top you will have a 360-degree view of the Manhattan skyline. You will find three cafes for casual snacks, small plates, and cocktails. There is also a restaurant with full dining features, although be sure to make reservations if you want to visit here.

3. 9/11 Memorial

You can visit this relatively new museum to pay tribute to the events of 9/11. The museum is dedicated to all the victims and is full of artefacts, recordings, photographs, and personal accounts of the day.

Be prepared for this to be an emotional visit, although it is one that you may want to make if you visit New York. The visit to the museum will take a half a day, although you may want to take some time to look around the area.

4. Gracie Mansion

This is the official home of the Mayor of New York City. You can take a tour of the mansion only on Tuesdays, and only at the times of 10am, 11am, 2pm, and 3pm.

Look out for the art and architecture as well as the furniture and books which are displayed. All of them reflect an important part of the history of the city.

Allow yourself a half day to do one of the tours, and see the gardens of the mansion. Keep an eye open for the mayor or his family, who do appear from time to time.

5. Empire State Building

You will find this in midtown Manhattan. It is 102 stories high, with the roof being at a height of 1,250 feet. If you include the antennae, the height is 1,454 feet high, making it the fifth tallest completed skyscraper in the USA, and it is also the 28th tallest building in the world.

There are observation decks on level 86 and 102, and these are visited by over 4 million people every year.

The building has been filmed in many movies such as King Kong, which was the first time it was filmed, in 1933. It has also been included as one of the ‘Seven Wonders of the Modern World’.
You can buy your ticket online so you avoid the queues.

Plan to spend a whole day in the area, although a visit to one of the decks will only take a half day. The area has plenty to see and do, so enjoy yourself looking around.

6. National September 11 Memorial and Museum

The memorial and the museum are located at the site of the World Trade Centre, where the Twin Towers were.

Take your time looking at the forest of trees and the two square pools in the centre. This is the exact place where the Twin Towers stood. The museum and memorial were opened to the public in 2014. Over a million visitors came during the first three months, and you should be prepared to be moved when you see it.

There are private tours which are often hosted by family members or first responders.

Allow yourself a half day to see the memorial and the museum, then spend some time in the area as there is plenty to see.

7. General Ulysses S. Grant Memorial

You will find this in Morningside heights, Manhattan. It is a memorial and final resting place of General Grant, who was the 18th president of the USA. His wife Julia Dent Grant is buried close by.

There is a very informative Visitor’s Centre where staff will answer any questions you may have.

The Memorial is free to the public, but it is only open on Wednesday to Saturday. It will only take a short while to see the memorial although the area is interesting to explore.

8. Chrysler Building

This building is easily spotted, as it is a very large triangle of Art Deco architecture. It is without a doubt, the most eye-catching skyscraper in NYC.

If possible, try to visit at night time when the windows are ablaze with lights. Notice the giant eagles instead of traditional gargoyles. Look out for the relief sculpture of racing cars and chrome hubcaps.

When it was being built, there was a race for the tallest building in Manhattan. The Chrysler won the race, but was very soon relieved of that crown by the Empire State Building in 1930.

9. One World Trade Centre

You may have heard of this as Freedom Tower. You will find it in Lower Manhattan. This is now the tallest building in the western hemisphere, and the 6th tallest in the world.
The total height is 1,776 feet tall. You may notice that the height in feet (1,776) is also the year of the Declaration of Independence.

Make sure you take a camera as this is an amazing thing to see. Spend a bit of time looking around the centre, take a ride up to the observation deck and enjoy the fantastic views.

10. Intrepid Sea, Air, and Space Museum

This is an American Military and Maritime museum which is to be found in New York City. You will find it on Pier 86 on the west side of Manhattan.

Here you will be able to see exhibits about the USS Intrepid, a Concorde SST, submarine USS Growler, and the Space Shuttle Enterprise.

The museum was opened in 1982, and is very popular with tourists. Plan to spend a full day here. There is a café where you can get lunch or snacks.

11. Statue of Liberty

While you may have seen pictures of this statue, nothing will prepare you for the sheer size of it! The statue, which is made of copper, was presented to the USA by French sculptor Bartholdi in October 1886.

The lady represents Libertas, a roman goddess. She has a torch above her head in her right hand. In her left hand she has a tablet with the date of the Declaration of Independence carved on it. At her feet, note the broken chain.

This is the first sight most immigrants see when they arrive from abroad. You can get onto the island and see the statue by taking a ferry, or one of the many cruises offered in the vicinity.

Buy your tickets online to ensure you get to see it when you want to.

Plan to spend a full day here, and be sure to take your camera!

12. Cycle along the Hudson

If you enjoy cycling, then this is a great way to see the sights along the Hudson river. Head to the west side of Manhattan. You will find cycle docking stations along the way, making it easy for you to rent one, and return it when you are finished.

The cycle path runs from north to south along the river, right at the edge. There are many cafes where you can stop for lunch, or take your own and stop wherever you please.

13. Theatre District

There are over 40 Broadway theatres in New York, and each year 13 million people visit them. Most of the theatres are in the well-known theatre district which is between 41st street and 52nd street.

Each season brings new shows and plays. Sometimes there are reruns of old favourites. The spring and fall seasons are where you will get the best deals, so be sure to check these times out. Most theatres will offer discounts at this time.

Treat yourself to a night in a hotel, then enjoy a show and a meal.

14. Times Square

Many years ago, this area was known for vice and drugs, but it has been changed and become a place where people get together. The most well-known time is New Year’s Eve, where the area comes to life, with a spectacular countdown and firework display.

If being in the midst of huge crowds does not appeal to you, then head for the Visitor’s Centre where you can see the New Year in on a smaller scale, and with a little less noise.

15. African Burial Ground

You will find this in Lower Manhattan. In 1991, at the start of a construction project, a burial ground of slaves was discovered. More than 400 caskets were uncovered, dating back to when New York had more slaves that any other US city.

There is a great Visitor’s Centre where you can learn all about that era of American-African history.

Allow a half day to look around here.

16. Liberty Island

This is the island where you will find the Statue of Liberty. It used to be called Bedloe’s Island but was renamed in 1956.

Most ferry tickets you buy will include a self-guided tour of the island. Most of these tours last about 40 minutes.

Be sure to stop in at the Information centre where you will learn about the statue and its history.

Access to the Crown is limited so if you plan on doing this, you must book in advance. You must also be able to walk up at least 146 steps in a confined space.

Plan to spend most of the day on the island, there are cafes, where you can get refreshments and snacks.

17. Bushwick Street Art

This neighbourhood is in the northern area of NYC and is historically comprised of Germanic immigrants and families. Since the late 20th century this has branched out to include Hispanic families.

If you are interested in street art, then you should plan a visit here. Empty walls seem to cry out for paint on them, and national as well as international artists have put their marks here. Look for names such as Banksy, ROA, Shepard Fairey, and Veng, to name a few.

All the walls are painted with the consent of the owners. The project, which was started by Joe Ficalora in 2012, has grown tremendously. It is called the Bushwick Collective.

Plan to spend a day here. Try to spot as many pictures as you can, and see how many names you recognise.

18. Brooklyn Brewery Tours

The brewery in Brooklyn has been making beer since 1988. They now produce a wide range of beers which you can buy in the shop.

Make sure you try a Brooklyn Summer Ale, and their Brooklyn Black Chocolate Stout, which is a new addition to the range.

Make sure you check the opening times and upcoming events.

Take a tour through the brewery – they are free – and learn about how these beers are perfected. Be aware that the tours run only on Saturday and Sunday, on the hour from 1 – 5pm, 1-4 pm on Sunday.

19. Rockefeller Centre

This area is described as one of the greatest projects of the Depression period, and was declared a landmark in 1985, as well as am historical landmark in 1987. Most people associate it with the annual lighting of the Christmas tree.

There are in fact 19 buildings in the complex, which you will find between 48th and 51st street in New York City.

This area is well-known for shopping, dining, and exploring. It is also home to many amazing sculptures and paintings. You may recognise some tv shows which were filmed there such as the Today Show, and Saturday Night live.

If you enjoy ice skating, then head there for a few hours. Plan on spending full day here as there is so much to see and do.

20. City Hall

This has been the home of New York City’s government since 1812. It is the oldest city hall in the USA. An interesting point is that it is still used for the original purpose. You will find it facing the Brooklyn Bridge, in Lower Manhattan.

It is a good idea to take one of the many tours available. This will take you through the marble hall, the governor’s room, and where, for a short while, Abraham Lincoln’s coffin lay in state in 1865.

It is important that you book this tour in advance as they fill up quickly.

21. Roosevelt Island Tramway

The tramway was the first aerial tramway in the USA, having been opened in 1976. It spans The East River, connecting Roosevelt Island and Upper East Side, Manhattan.
This was one of the first forms of mass transport and is still one of the few which uses a MetroCard.
The views of Manhattan are fantastic. A point to know here is that the movie ‘Spiderman’ was filmed in the tramway.
Plan to spend a half day on the island, although you may decide to stay longer. There is plenty to de and see, and cafes to eat and drink.

22. New York Historical Society

This is the oldest museum in New York, having been opened in 1804. You will be able to learn all about New York in years gone by.
Look out for things like theatre artefacts, and unique clothing. You will see exhibits of daily life from that era.
Plan to spend a half day in the museum.

23. Ellis Island

This was the entry port for over 12 million immigrants from 1892 till 1954. If you are interested in tracing a relative who came to the USA, then this is a good place to start.
The Museum if filled with many interesting things about the country and the people who arrived there.
You can take the ‘Hard Hat Tour’ which is guided, and 90 minutes long, or you can head off on your own and explore the island.
You will be able to learn all about the Island of Hope, Island of tears on your tour.
It is a good idea to plan a whole day here, be sure to book your ferry in advance to avoid disappointment.

24. Washington Square Park

You will find this public park in Greenwich Village, in Lower Manhattan. In the centre you will find the Washington Square Arch. The fountain area has always been a popular meeting place for locals, as well as tourists.
Many of the buildings are part of the university although they may have been homes for artists in earlier times.
The park is a great place to relax for a while. You can buy snacks nearby and enjoy the surroundings.

25. New York Harbour

The harbour lies at the mouth of the Hudson River which empties into the Atlantic Ocean. This is one of the largest natural harbours in the world.
The harbour and waterways have over 24 islands, some of which you are able to visit.
The best way to see the harbour is to take a cruise. There are plenty of companies which do this, and tours last from 90 minutes up to half day trips.
Depending on where you want to go, allow up to a day for this.

26. Brooklyn Flea Market

If you want to sample local cuisine and enjoy people watching, then head here for a day. There are different vendors each week, and you will find a huge selection of goods to look at and buy, as well as a varied selection of food stalls.
The market supports local industry wherever possible, and you will find everything from food to clothing and shoes.
As the temperatures drop the market relocates to a warehouse in Sunset Park.
If you are after a particular vendor, then you can check on the website to see when they will be selling.

27. Fashion Industry of Technology Museum (FIT)

If fashion through the ages appeals to you, then be sure to check this out. You will find it on 7th Ave and 27th Street, Garment District, Midtown West.
The museum was founded in 1969 and strives to advance knowledge of fashion by way of exhibitions and publications.
Some of the exhibitions include ‘The Corset: Fashioning the Body’, and ‘Gothic: Dark Glamour’.
There is always something going on here and some exhibitions rotate weekly. The permanent collection encompasses over 50,000 garments dating from the 18th century to the present day.
Allow yourself a full day here.

28. Metropolitan Museum of Art

You will find this museum in New York City, it is the largest art museum in the USA. It is also very well visited, with over 7 million visitors in 2016. It has a permanent collection of over 2 million pieces of work, sectioned into 17 departments.
The permanent collections contain art and sculptures from both American and European masters. Look out for the collection of musical instruments which is second to none.
There is an amazing collection of antique weapons and armour from around the world.
Plan to spend the day here, there is enough to see. There is a café where you can stop half way for a snack.

29. The Plaza Hotel

You will find this luxury hotel in the midtown Manhattan area. It was opened in1907. The hotel is marked as an historical building by the National Trust.
You will find dozens of eclectic boutiques here as well as many places to eat, both large and small. Prices range from relatively cheap to top of the range.
You may want to stay a night and enjoy a wonderful meal here.
Plan to spend at least a half day here, perhaps partake of afternoon tea. Weddings are often held there so you may be able to catch a bouquet being thrown!

30. Green Wood Cemetery

This cemetery is one of the most visited in the state of New York. It was founded in 1838 and is the final resting place of over 600,000 people.
This is not your typical cemetery, rather it looks like a leafy, green park. Note that it is also contains Brooklyn’s highest point, namely battle Hill, which was the site of the Revolutionary War.
Notice the statue of the God of Wisdom, Minerva. Keep a lookout for the green parrots who live there.
It will take a half day to see this, and is well worth the time.

31. Flushing Meadows

Head for Corona park and you will not be disappointed. There is an excellent Hall of science to be seen. You can also check out the Arthur Ashe Stadium, and Citi Field.
There is a zoo for the kids, a boating lake, skate park, playfields, barbeque area and hockey centre.
This is a great place to take a picnic lunch and explore the latest addition which is a wetland. Look out for swamp milkweed and azalea. Catch-and-release is permitted in the Meadow Lake.

32. The Brooklyn Bridge

This is one of the oldest road bridges in the USA. The building was started in 1869 and the bridge was finished in 1883. I t connects Manhattan and Brooklyn and is a cable/suspension bridge with a span of 1,595 feet.
A point to note is that this bridge was the first steel wire suspension bridge to be constructed.
It will not take you too long to look at it, but be sure to take your camera and get some shots of the bridge.

33. Carnegie Hall

This is a concert venue in midtown Manhattan. It was designed and built by Andrew Carnegie in 1891, and is still ‘the’ place to go for classical and popular music shows.
There are three different halls in the complex, seating over 3,600 people. Carnegie Hall presents over 250 performances each year, and you must book in advance for any of them.
Plan on spending an evening at a show, then check into a hotel and stay the night. There is accommodation in all price ranges, as well as many restaurants and cafes.

34. Nitehawk Cinema

You will find this in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. As the name suggests it runs well into the night. It has been designed for late night movie-goers, although there is also an afternoon session for new parents and babies.
There is a bar and restaurant, where you can sample shots of your choice, and get a meal from their extensive menu.
Depending on what you like, plan to check into an hotel, and watch a late-night show.

35. Grand Central Terminal

The station, also known locally as grand central, was built to serve commuters going to and from the city. It has now become one of the most visited tourist attractions in the city, bringing about 21 million visitors each year.

There are 44 platforms, which is more than any other station in the world. All the platforms are below ground.

Grand Central is not just a station, it is a collection of unique boutiques and restaurants, with over 35 places to eat and drink, and more than 60 shops to browse.

Look for the clock which is well known as a meeting place for people.

Plan to spend a half day here, although you may want to stay longer, and people watch.

36. Strand Book Store

This bookshop in New York City is where you will find rare and out-of-print books. It is one of the most well-used book shops in the city, with a staggering 18 miles of books on offer!
There is a section of books for $1and many new titles are always on sale well below other stores.

Early editions and rare signed copies are to be found on the third floor.

If you are a book lover, you will want to spend a good amount of time here, so allow yourself at least a half day to browse the shelves.

37. Little Italy

You will find this district in Manhattan. It draws a huge tourist crowd every year, who come to see the souvenir shops and traditional Italian cuisine. The streets abound with bakeries and eateries.
Mulberry street becomes a pedestrian walkway through the summer at weekends, and if possible, you should stay for the San Gennaro festival which happens each September.
If you plan to see the festival, be sure you book accommodation in advance to avoid disappointment.

38. Cherry Blossom festival

This festival is held in the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens, in April.
Stay for the tea ceremonies, anime/magna display, and Kabuki dances. Not to mention cherry blossom as far as you can see.
This is a good place to take an RV, stay a few days and enjoy the festival. Afterwards you can explore other parts of Brooklyn.

39. Trinity Church

This is one of the most well-known religious institutions in the city of New York. It is found on Wall Street.
It was originally built for the Church of England and at the time was the tallest building in the city. This was due to the towering spire.
Look for the 23 bells which can be heard chiming all over downtown Manhattan.
The Church also featured in various movies, one of them being National treasure.
Plan to spend a half day here.

40. Gallow Green

You will find this rooftop bar at the top of the McKittrick Hotel. The staff pose as actors and actresses from a bygone era, complete with costumes and make-up.
Considering that the bar is right at the top of a building, you will be amazed at how green and lush the area is. Vines, shrubs, and lights make this a place where you can escape the bustle of the streets.
Musicians regularly play jazz, with actors providing the entertainment. You will find punch served in copper bowls, and enjoy cocktails you have never heard of before!
It may be wise to stay a night if you are going to truly enjoy the rooftop bar, so check into a hotel, and have a good night out.

41. Brookfield Place

You will find this in Lower Manhattan. It is a luxury complex which may also be called the World Financial centre.
The ground floor is taken up by iconic shops such as Burberry, Hermes, and Gucci. You will also find a food hall a huge variety of restaurants.
Once you have done your shopping, you may want to try your hand at the ice skating (during the cold months), or enjoy the winter gardens, which are enclosed in glass.
You should plan on spending a full day here, as there is plenty to see and do.

42. The Cathedral of St. Patrick

This is a prominent landmark in New York City. It is built in a Neo-Gothic design. The archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese of New York has the seat here. You will find it across the street from the Rockefeller Centre.
You can take a tour of the cathedral, and must buy a ticket in advance. It is an excellent idea to take the tour as you will learn a lot from your guide.
Make sure you check out Mass times if you plan on attending one.
There is a large visitor’s Centre, and a gift shop where you can buy many religious items.
Plan to spend a half day, including the tour.

43. Nom Wah Tea Parlor

This parlor has been serving dim-sum since 1920, which makes it the oldest dim-sum place in New York. It is classed as a ‘fast-casual’ restaurant with a new take on Chinese food.
You will find that the menu is changed often, and the food is fresh. They have ‘special offers’ on most weeks, so keep a look out for them.
If you enjoy traditional, well-made dim-sum, then be sure you head here for a lunch or dinner.

44. American Museum of Natural History

This museum is located on Upper West Side, Manhattan. This is one of the largest museums in the world. Head for Theodore Roosevelt Park and you will find the complex.
There are 28 buildings housing 45 permanent exhibition halls. Look out for the planetarium and the library.
There are over 33 million exhibits of plants, fossils, animals, rocks, minerals, and stones. There are even exhibits of human remains.
This is one museum which is not to be missed, so plan on spending the full day here. There is a café where you can grab a bite at lunchtime.

45. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

You may also have heard of this as ‘The Guggenheim’. It is an art museum in the Upper East Side of Manhattan.
This museum is the permanent home of a collection of art which continues to expand. The collection consists of Impressionist, Post-Impressionist, Contemporary, and Modern art.
Notice that the building is slightly larger at the top than the base, and is cylindrical. It was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, and has a unique ramp which goes from the ground upwards, in a spiral along the outer edge of the structure.
It will take you most of the day to see the complete museum.

46. Apollo Theatre

You will find this theatre in Harlem. Ella Fitzgerald made her first performance here in 1934. Jimi Hendrix won an Amateur Night Contest here in 1964.
The theatre still attracts big names such as Bruce Springsteen and Tracy Morgan.
Wednesday is Amateur Night, so if you think you have talent and want to show it off, then head over here! If you plan to see a performance be sure to book tickets in advance.

47. Columbus Circle

This iconic landmark in Manhattan is at a very heavily trafficked intersection, located at 8th Avenue and Broadway. This is the official point from where highway distances in New York are measured. Not many people know that it is also the centre of the 25-mile radius in the restricted travel area for C-2 Visa holders.
The monument, and circle were named after Christopher Columbus. You will find the Theatre District close by, and if you he3ad north, you will find Upper West Side.
While it will not take you very long to see the landmark, take some time looking ata the surroundings as there is plenty to see and do.

48. Alphabet City Beer Company

This is a cosy bar/beer store where you can taste the most delectable home crafted beers. You will find over 350 varieties of bottled beer, and 12 types of beer on tap.
Grab a cheese platter and sample a beer. Better still, take your lunch and beer outside and enjoy on one of the many cruises you can take in the harbour.
The company organise summer cruises on their own sailing yacht, the Ventura, where you can see the harbour with a glass of ice cold beer in your hand.
Check out the extensive tap list of interesting beers.
Allow yourself a half day for a cruise. This may not be suitable for children.

49. The High Line

This is to be found on the west side of Manhattan. It is a railway line into the park, and was constructed in 2006. The line is 1.45 miles long and elevated.
The park itself is built on the disused viaduct and runs from Gansevoort Street to the West Side Yard.
The inspiration for the line came from the tree lined avenue in Paris, and it is visited by 5 million people each year, who take the trip to the park.
Grab a picnic lunch and relax in the beautiful surroundings while you people watch.

50. Church of St. Mary

You will find the church in the neighbourhood of Longacre Square, which is also known as Times Square. The church was founded in 1868 and is known for the use of incense, hence the nickname of ‘Smoky Mary’.
The architecture is Gothic, and it is very well-preserved. Look for the vaulted columns which work very well with the organ music. The blue and gold was added during the redecoration in the 1990’s.
It will take about two hours to see the inside and the outside of the church.

51. Brooklyn Heights

It is very easy to forget that you are in a big city when you stand here, as the view is breath-taking. This is exactly what the designer had in mind when it was developed in the 1950’s.
You will find a park where you can stroll, and a waterfront where you can stop and relax. The promenade is 1/3 of a mile long, with picture postcard views of the Statue of Liberty, Brooklyn Bridge, and lower Manhattan.
Note the 19th century houses down the tree lined streets. Allow yourself a half day to look around this area.

52. Lincoln Centre for Performing Arts

You will find this in the borough of Manhattan. It is a complex of buildings set on 16 acres. It hosts many performing arts shows each year, including the New York Philharmonic and the Metropolitan Opera. The NYC Ballet also performs here.
If you plan to see a show here, you must book in advance. You can check out their upcoming events, so you do not miss anything.

53. Coney Island

This forms part of Brooklyn, and is an island full of leisure and entertainment places. 60,000 people live on Coney Island, but it is most well-known for the amusement parks and seaside resort facilities.
Look out for the ‘Brooklyn Cyclones’’, a minor league baseball team who at home there. You may also be lucky enough to catch the New York Cosmos, which is a professional soccer club there.
Plan to spend a full day here. There are plenty of places where you can grab a bite to eat through the day.

54. Aire Ancient Baths

If you need to unwind and relax, then look no further than here! You will find the baths on Franklin Street.
It is essential that you book in advance as only 15 people are allowed in at a time.
You will find six thermal baths, a salt water pool, steam room, and a red wine bath! With flickering candles in terra-cotta lanterns, and soft music playing, you will wish you could stay longer!
Be sure to check out gift boxes to take for special people.
A note here is that the baths are mixed, so you need to bring a swimsuit with you.

55. Chelsea Market

This complex is a food hall, shopping mall, office complex, and a tv production facility, all rolled into one. You will find it in Manhattan. The factory used to be the Nabisco complex, until it was transformed into the market.
Anything you want, you will find here. Foods, clothing, shoes, jewellery, cheese and wines, olive oils, flowers – and the list goes on.
An interesting point here is that ‘The Food Network’ filmed the show ‘Iron Chef America’ here, as well as ‘Emeril Live’.
Plan to spend a day here as there is so much to see. Plenty of places to eat and drink.

56. Copper and Oak Bar

You will find this bar in Allen Street, New York. It is the smallest bar in the city. From the outside it looks just like a hole in the wall, but the inside is a fun-filled atmosphere. Look out for the bourbon barrel, and the fine whiskey collection.
Most evenings there will only be standing room, so try to go early and be prepared for a bit of a crowd. However, the atmosphere and décor make up for all the overcrowding.

57. Coney Island Cyclone

This is a roller coaster ride with a thrilling jolt. It dates back to 1927, to when the island was a booming holiday resort.
The roller coaster rattles and shakes over 2,600 feet of track with 12 drops and 27 elevation changes. The highest elevation is 85 feet, with a drop of 60 foot, which will take your breath away!
Plan to spend a day in the park, there are many other things to see here, and of course there are hot dogs and beer at many cafes!

58. The Comedy Cellar

The original Comedy Cellar is on MacDougal Street, New York. If you enjoy stand-up comedy with some legendary performers, then you need to head here for an evening of entertainment!
Shows are held every day of the week, but reserving in advance is vital as they sell out all the time.
One point to remember is that if you sit in the front row, you may be included in the show!

59. Church of St Luke and St Matthew

Brooklyn architect John Welch designed this fabulous church, and it was modelled on the basilicas of Italy. You will find it in the area of Clinton Hill.
Note the front with the grand arches, and stone walls. A special point of interest here is the rose window over the front door, which is 28 feet in diameter.
Make sure you check out the times if you plan to attend a service.
It will take an hour or two to see the inside of the church, although it is worth spending longer in the area.

60. 34th Street

This major street in New York is in the borough of Manhattan. It connects Lincoln Tunnel and Queens Tunnel. You will know it by the enormous billboard and light display.
It is in this area that you will find Macy’s Department store where the movie ‘Miracle on 34th street’ was filmed.
At 33rd street you will find an indoor shopping mall with many unique boutiques, and restaurants.
Plan to spend a day in the area. In the proximity you can find the Empire State Building, so you could see them both on the same day.

61. Yankee Stadium

If you are a baseball fan, then this should be on your list of things to see. The new field opened in 2009, and although it is very like the original field, there are cup holders at every seat, and high definition scoreboards, making it a lot easier to watch the game!
There is a museum behind Centre Field, so be sure to check this out.
If you plan to watch a game, be prepared to spend a day here. There are plenty of food stalls where you can buy lunch.

62. Whitney Museum of American Art

You may also hear this called ‘The Whitney’. It is an art museum in Manhattan, and was founded in 1931.
The focus here is mainly on 20th and 21st century art, with paintings, sculptures, prints, photographs, and films on exhibit. There are works from over 3,000 artists on display. Most of the work is by artists who are still alive, so it is a very modern place to visit.
There is an annual exhibition which gives less well-known artists a chance to show their works.
Plan to spend a full day here, there is a café where you can grab a bit at lunch time.

63. Union Square

This used to be known as the spot where two of the busiest roads in Manhattan crossed. After that it became a place where rallies and protests have taken place. Now the biggest attraction is the permanently open Green Market which was started by farmers in 1976.
If you fancy a bunch of fresh grapes, or any other fruit and veg, then this is the place to head for. Thousands of local farmers bring their wares here every week, and it is one of the most visited markets in the area.
It may only take you an hour or so to look around here, but it is worth exploring the nearby area.

64. Church of St Francis Xavier

This church has served the Catholic community since 1851. It is located on 16th street in New York.
The church was originally founded by Jesuits. The original building was demolished in 1878 and then rebuilt in 1882.
Note the exterior which is Neo-Baroque. Pay attention to the stained-glass windows and the amazing paintings and sculptures inside the church.
It will take an hour or two to see the inside of the church, although you may choose to stay for mass and other services, which are published inside the church.

65. Helicopter tour of the City

A different way to see the ‘big apple’ is to take a helicopter tour. The tours last about 15 minutes, and you will get a birds’ eye view of such things as the Statue of Liberty, One World trade Centre, and the Chrysler Building.
The pilots give you a running commentary of where you are flying, and can answer any questions you have.
Normally the helicopters take of near battery Park in the downtown area, Manhattan, and return you back there at the end.
There are several helicopter companies offering tours of the area.
Note that prices vary with each tour company, so be sure to check this out in advance.

66. Broadway

This is the oldest north-south road in New York. It dates back to the 19th century. The road runs for 13 miles, passing through Manhattan and the Bronx, among other places.
This area is most well-known for being the heart of the American Theatre Industry, so it is very likely that you may see one or two famous people as you explore it.
Plan to spend a morning looking around this iconic street, you will not be disappointed.

67. Governor’s Island

You will find this island in New York Harbour about 800 yards from the tip of Manhattan Island. It is a very popular summer destination for the public, offering free art and cultural events. There are also summer activities which are held there, with the focus being on a ‘good day out for the family’.
There is a 46-acre park which provides excellent walking and has green spaces for kids to romp in.
Pack a picnic basket, hop on a ferry, and spend a day enjoying the outdoors.

68. Flatiron Building

This unique building can be found in midtown NY. Once it was the highest building in the area, although now it is dwarfed by taller buildings. However, it still draws people to look at every year. People predicted that it would never stand up to winds, but it has.
The ground floor has interesting shops to look at, but the upper floors are not accessible to the public. You can also see the black and white collection of iconic photographs which are in the lobby. You will also be able to read about the tower and its construction.
It will not take more than an hour to see this, but you may want to look around the area afterwards.

69. Astoria

This area is to be found in Queens neighbourhood, New York. It is a very laid-back area with many small businesses and houses. It is home to a complex mix of races.
The area is probably best-known for the Greek influence, with many Greek Tavernas and cafes along the streets.
Try to visit the Museum of the Moving Image, which will give you a glimpse into the making of movies and television programmes.
If you fancy a beer, then head to the open-air beer garden in the park.

70. Fifth Avenue

This road probably has the most elegant and the most expensive houses in the world! It runs from West 143rd street to Washington Square.
The part of Fifth Ave that crosses Midtown Manhattan is where you will find elite shops and restaurants. This is without a doubt the most expensive street in the world. You should visit it – just the once!
Some of the most coveted real estate is to be found here, and then street is noted by the American Planning Association as one of the ‘2102 Great Places in America’.
Make sure you have a look at some iconic shops along the way.
Surprisingly, you will also find some great museums here, as well as historical landmarks, so it is worth spending a day exploring it. Maybe leave the credit card at home!

71. Museum of Modern Art

This is locally referred to as MoMA. The museum houses the work of Picasso and Rodin, as well as ultra-modern exhibits. There are literally dozens of permanent exhibits showing all sorts of artwork from well-known artists.
There is a cinema within the complex, and a sculpture garden which is well worth visiting.
You can spend the day there as there is a very delightful restaurant and bar.
A note here is that Fridays are free entry so plan accordingly.

72. Chinatown

Chinatown is in Manhattan’s lower side, and is home to an estimated 100,000 people. It is one of the oldest Chinese areas in the USA.
Chinatown used to comprise mainly Cantonese speaking people, but now Mandarin is the ‘official’ language of the area.
You will find the Museum of Chinese in American located here, as well as many restaurants with Chinese cuisine. Many are open all night.
Try to spend a full day in this area, and have a meal of authentic Chinese food.

73. The Bronx

The Bronx is a zoo. You will find it in the area of the Bronx, which is a borough of New York. This is the largest zoo in the USA and one of the largest in the world.
The zoo sees over 2.15 million visitors each year. There are 265 acres of lands through which the Bronx River gently flows.
The zoo is well-known for the diverse collection of animals, and the award-winning shows.
Aim to spend a full day here. You will be able to get lunch at one of the many snack places.

74. Wollman Ice Rink

This public ice rink is in Central Park. It was opened in 1949, with funds which came from Kate Wollman. Normally the rink is open to the public from October to April, while in the summer months it is transformed into an amusement park, named the Victoria Gardens.
The ice rink itself is on the site that was previously named ‘The Pond’, and is at the southeast corner of Central Park. This pond was drained and filled to become the ice rink.
If you are there in the winter months, you will be able to hire ice skates close by.

75. Madison Square Garden

This is in fact a huge indoor arena, and is to be found in Midtown Manhattan.
There are many events which take place here through the year such as professional boxing and wrestling, basketball, and indoor ice hockey, shows and circuses.
The Garden is the oldest sports facility in New York. It is also the oldest national Hockey arena, and the second oldest basketball arena.
Make sure you check online for upcoming events.
Be sure to check what events are happening and then book your tickets in advance, to avoid disappointment.

76. The Museum of the Moving Image

You will find this museum in Astoria, Queens. It was opened in 1988 and is very involved in bringing to the public the history of art and technology of film and television.
There are many audio and video exhibits showing the history of the film industry.
If discussions about movies past and present appeal to you then you may want to attend one of the many held here.
The museum is the home of a significant collection of video games and gaming hardware.
Plan to spend most of a day here.

77. Radio City Music Hall

This is one of the many performance venues in New York, but it by far the most elegant. It is well-known as the prettiest art deco concert hall, with interior features such as chandeliers and lush carpets.
Radio City may be best remembered as the home of the Rockettes, although many well-known performers have passed through there, including Lady Gaga, and the Jonas Brothers.
Check out the upcoming events and book your tickets in advance, then sit back and enjoy a show.

78. Top of the Rock

This is the top of the Rockefeller Centre, where you will have a 360-degree view of the city. This rates as one of the best things to do in New York. You are guaranteed amazing photographs of the Empire State Building.
The observation deck is on the 70th floor, and has three tiers.
Try to visit at sunset, as this will give a completely different look to the city.
Whatever you do – don’t forget your camera!

79. Madame Tussauds New York

Over 150 years after the death of Madame Tussaud, her collection still lives on. This is one of the many collections around the world.
There are over 200 wax figures including movie stars, athletes, singers, and politicians. Each model has been painstakingly created with exact measurements.
An interesting point here is that each model which is created costs about $300,000 to complete!
This museum gets incredibly busy at times, so it is best to avoid school holidays when you visit, otherwise you will be overrun by kids and parents!

80. Cathedral of St John the Divine

This is the world’s largest Anglican cathedral church. It is constructed in traditional stone, and a mix of limestone and granite. You will find the church on Amsterdam Avenue, New York.
Look for the high gothic features and be sure to check out the seven different chapels inside. You will find each of them is named after a different saint.
There are daily tours of the cathedral, and various prayers through the day which you are welcome to attend.
Allow yourself a half day to see the cathedral, although this may take longer if you attend a service.

81. The Cloisters

This museum is found in Upper Manhattan, and specialises in European architecture, decorative arts and sculptures. The original collection belonged to George Grey Barnard, and was later bought by J.D. Rockefeller, who extended the collection, and designed the Cloisters.
There are four Cloisters which were sourced from French monasteries and abbeys. Be sure to visit the gardens as they are magnificent, and of the early medieval period.
Make sure you see the indoor chapels. You will notice that the rooms are grouped by period and include Gothic, Spanish, Romanesque, and Fuentiduena periods.
Be sure to check the opening times as they change for the winter season.
There are over 5,000 pieces of art from Europe on exhibit, dating back to the 12th century. You will also find works from the bronze and iron age.
Plan to spend a full day here as there is plenty to see.

82. Lower East Side Tenement Museum

Between 1862 and 1935 this building was home to over 7,000 people from 20 nations. Now it is a museum, with a visitor’s centre. The museum is dedicated to showing how life was for an immigrant in those days.
You can take the guided tour, which will show you some apartments where people lived, and shops where they would buy food.
You will even be able to taste the food that immigrants cooked, and see the historical archives.
Allow yourself at least a half day to see all there is to see here.

83. Prospect Park

This is the second largest park in Brooklyn, it is over 520 acres of green land. You will find it between Park Slope and Winsor Terrace in Brooklyn.
There is a zoo for the kids, and a perfect picnic spot in the forest. A point to note here is that this is the only forest in the area. In the summer months there are concerts in the park which are always free.
Pack a picnic lunch and head there to enjoy the lovely gardens and fresh air.

84. Staten Island Ferry

This Staten Island Ferry is one of several that belong to the NYC Department of Transportation, which will take you around the Harbour. You can book a tour cruise at any nearby ferry ports, or even get your tickets online.
The ferry runs from Manhattan to Staten Island, every 15 to 20 minutes. It runs every single day of the year.
The ferry is still as popular as ever for connecting Staten Island with the other boroughs of New York, and is the single busiest ferry route in the USA. This is also the busiest passenger only ferry in the world.
Plan to spend a half day taking the ferry to the Island and exploring it.

85. Bronx Park

Bronx park covers 718 acres along the Bronx River in New York City. Here you will find the Botanical Gardens which are well worth a visit, and the Bronx Zoo.
If you enjoy cycling, then this will appeal to you. Cycle paths go north west, north, and east along scenic routes.
It is widely recognised that Bronx Park is one of the most beautiful parks in the state. You will find an ecologically diverse selection of wildlife in the park, and may unusual plants along the paths.
This is a good place to walk, run or cycle.

86. Public Library, New York

Outside the library you will see two enormous Tennessee marble lions, who are named Patience and Fortitude.
The interior of the library is nothing short of regal, a perfect setting for reading a book or two.
Make sure you find the Rose main reading Room which is over 300 feet long with the most amazing chandeliers and ceiling murals.
An interesting point here is that the library was the scene for the quip ‘Back off, I’m a scientist’ from the movie Ghostbusters.
Spend a morning browsing the old and new books.

87. The Finger Lakes

You will find these lakes in Rochester. They are well-known for outdoor activities, such as biking and boating, hunting, and fishing. They are also known for fine golf courses, vineyards, and breweries.
Check out the NY wine and culinary centre where you can taste the most delicious food paired with the perfect wine.
You can book accommodation or take an RV here.
Breweries and cideries are to be found in this region. There are hotels, motels, resorts and camp-grounds all around the lakes. This is a great place to take an RV, stay a few days and explore the area.

88. The Frick Collection

This art museum is to be found on the Upper east side of Manhattan. You will find the collection of works by Henry Clay Frick which date from 1849 – 1919. The Frick is one of the most prestigious small art museums in the USA.
Make sure you look out for the collection of old master paintings and the fine furniture, which has its own gallery.
The paintings are still displayed as Frick had arranged them. The gallery hosts small, temporary exhibits frequently, displaying the works of European artists. There is also a collection of sculptures and porcelain.
Allow at least a half day to see the entire museum.

89. Bryant Park

This is a privately-owned park in the Manhattan district, between 5th and 6th streets. The park was designed by landscape artist Hann/Olin Ltd in 1988, and is very close to the library.
The park is well-known for the lush gardens, al fresco dining, and free activities, so if you are at a loss for something to do with your kids, then check out the upcoming events at the park.
Grab some lunch and join a group. In the winter months the ice rink is open.

90. Sheep Meadow

This fifteen-acre field is right in the centre of Central Park. No organises sports events are permitted as the park is only for families to enjoy. The field is preserved for relaxation and picnicking in the summer months.
Many years ago, sheep used to graze in the park, but now the park and local tavern are there for the enjoyment of the public.
Be aware that each year the park closes in winter for maintenance and to get it ready for the following year, so plan to visit in the summer months.

91. Brooklyn Botanical Gardens

You will find these spectacular gardens in Brooklyn. They were founded in 1910 and are in the Prospect Park area.
The point of attraction with these gardens is that you will find many ‘gardens within gardens’. There is an amazing collection of plants. Be sure to see the Bonsai Museum, and the Aquatic plant house.
There are over 14,000 different species of plant so it may take a full morning to see the entire garden.

92. HOHO Bus New York


One of the best ways to see the city is to take the hop on-hop off bus. For the price of one ticket, you can ride the bus to a variety of different venues with commentary along the way.
When you want to see an attraction such as the Empire State Building, simply hop off the bus. You get on the next bus when you are done.
Be sure to book your ticket so you can leave on the first bus.
The ticket normally lasts for a full day, and you should allow yourself this time to see places you plan.

93. Winter Garden Atrium

You will find this 10-story glass building in Vesey Street, New York. It was built in 1988 and houses plants, trees, and flowers. There is also a selection of shops to browse.
The Winter Gardens were rebuilt after being shattered in the 9/11 disaster, and have been transformed back to what they used to be, possibly even better.
The huge palms, magnificent staircase and high ceilings make this a wonderful place to escape the cold outside.
If possible, try to visit at Christmas when the lights are on. Be prepared to spend at least a half day here.

94. Hudson River Dinner Cruise

This is a great way to see New York from the River, and even better to see it as the sun goes down.
The cruise ship has a magnificent restaurant on board, and you can board it at Pier 81.
You’ll enjoy a three-course meal while seeing the sights of Manhattan, views of the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, and many more places.
This is a great idea if you plan on proposing to a loved one! If possible, you should choose the VIP option as this gives you entrance to the open bar, and guaranteed window seating.

95. Obscura Oddities and Antiquities

This is an amazing little store which is tucked away in the corner of 10th and ‘A’ in the east village of Manhattan. You will never know the shop is there, and could easily walk right past it.
You will find a collection of all things obscure and weird such as medical art prints, taxidermied pats, Victorian mourning jewellery, corsets, pinned insects, and the list goes on.
While you may never be inclined to buy anything here, it is an interesting place to visit, the owners are friendly and knowledgeable. You may only spend an hour inside – or you may be intrigued and stay longer!

96. See a Broadway Show

One thing that should be on your list is to see a show here. There are more than 36 theatres in close proximity, with some of them hosting great performances by well-known artists.
Whether you enjoy big-budget musicals or plays, you will find a show that you will enjoy. Most theatres have a restaurant close by where you can get an evening meal before or after the show.
Make a night of it, check into a hotel, see a show, have a meal, and make it an evening to remember!

97. Adirondack Mountains

If you need to get away from the big city for a few days, then make sure you head up here. You will find this just a few hours north of the city.
There are many ways to enjoy the outdoors, such as skiing, hunting, fishing, walking, and hiking, so whatever you enjoy, you will be able to do.
This is a great area to take an RV, spend a few days and relax.

98. Fish for free

If you enjoy fishing, then this is something that will appeal to you. The city has over 500 miles of shoreline. There are also rivers and lakes where you can take a rod and reel.
You will find places that hire equipment on a daily or weekly basis, so you will have plenty of opportunity to fish to your heart’s content.
Even better is that it is free to fish in every borough, although city regulations need to be obeyed.

99. 5 Beekman Street

This is one of the most beautiful buildings in the heart of the financial district in Manhattan. The odd thing about it is that it has been empty for decades!
The Victorian style is now one of the few still remaining buildings here, with cast iron railings and high ceilings.
Not one soul has lived in or worked in the building since the 1940’s, although now there is a hotel inside which is worth looking at. Perhaps you can find out the reason it has been unoccupied for all those years!

100. Eat some chopped cheese

This may sound horrible, but it is in fact a staple of Brooklyn delicatessens. Unlike bagels, which most people are familiar with, the chopped cheese sandwich remains relatively unknown outside the area.
Be prepared to try one of these as you might get to like them!
You will find this delicacy at most sandwich shops. Try to keep an open mind and have one! Most will come with ground beef, melted cheese, lettuce, onion, tomato in a roll. You can add or omit any of the ingredients as you wish. Enjoy!

Summary
New York has so many interesting places to go and things to see, not to mention different styles of cuisine to enjoy. Whether you like museums and historical places, people watching, walking in the park, or tasting different food, you will find that there is something that appeals to you. There is truly something here for every person, no matter what age they are.


 Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl



GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.3

Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 8, 2009

SUBSCRIBE 1.2K

How do they do it~! How does Freemasonry brainwash human beings and turn them into sheep-people. First, at the head of the parade, they place their Talking Mules in the media who preach the benefits of faith and politics. Then, at the back of the herd, they position their Trojan Horses, in the Lodge, Unions and on the Net. The Talking Mules then BRAY their guilt-trip out loud; "Hee~Haw, follow the Yaw~Way of LOVE". The sheep-people then move out to-get-her, like lemmings on the way to the edge of a precipice, slaves who do their own shopping, on the way to their own crucifixion.

The SculPTor


This Truth May Scare You! (2018-2019)

Anonymous Official

Published on Dec 16, 2018

This Truth May Scare You See This Before it is Deleted 2018-2019 EVENTS WORLD EARTH UNIVERSE SUBSCRIBE: https://goo.gl/zBkuyB Find more content like this on Gaia: http://bit.ly/SupportGaia - Connect with Anonymous - Subscribe ● //www.youtube.com/subscription_c... Anonymous Google+ ● https://plus.google.com/+Anonymous Anonymous Website ● http://anonofficial.com Anonymous Facebook ● //facebook.com/anonymousdirect Anonymous Twitter ● //twitter.com/anonymousOfcl Anonymous T-Shirts ● http://anonymousofficial.spreadshirt.com Anonymous Mask (Modern) ● http://amzn.to/1U9q8oI Anonymous Mask (White) ● http://amzn.to/1TrNree Anonymous Mask (Black & Gold) ● http://amzn.to/1U9qc83 anonymous message alert events world news current events end times prophecy mystery hidden truth earth origins proof footage sun travel that is impossible 2017 2018 2019 today the past week or so You can either poison your mind or feed it. You can choose to drown in the mainstream or forge a new path all on your own. You are watching Anonymous because you’ve woken up to the lie. You are aware that there is more to our story than we’ve been led to believe. We’ve found a great resource to uncovering deep truths, hidden agendas and suppressed wisdom that you need to be aware of. It’s called Gaia. We’ve teamed up with them to amplify our message and continue to move the masses towards positive change. Gaia’s mission is to empower the evolution of consciousness and we share a similar belief… if enough of us wake up, we all wake up. This is how we win. We are Legion. We do not forgive. We do not forget. http://bit.ly/SupportGaia The tree of life or Axis Mundi is a key concept found in many ancient belief systems. Primarily, it is the central axis upon which the entire world and universe is held aloft. We explore the tree of life, as it is conceptualized in many enduring spiritual traditions, including Abrahamic, Mayan, Vedic and Norse beliefs, to discover that it is much more than a pervasive myth. Encoded within the lore, we find a deeper understanding of how we were created, the secret to unlocking the divine spark within and perhaps the secrets to immortality. This presentation was originally webcast October 10, 2017. TOPICS FROM THE EPISODE: Digitized Biology New research shows biology can be digitized, and the tree of life may reveal the code of human life. A Frequency for Life Scholars pinpoint a connection between human DNA, pyramids in Egypt, and Hebrew letters, identifying a frequency that gives rise to life as we know it. Answers in the Symbols Researchers reveal the meaning behind the tree of life symbol in many of the world’s religions to help us connect with the divine spark of life within us. Secrets in the Trees of Life & Knowledge Scholars uncover the secret of transcendence, buried in misinformation and misinterpretation for generations. Original Video Credit (Gaia Originals): Gaia Original Series - http://bit.ly/SupportGaia Share this video: https://youtu.be/tk7A-oOtjWM


Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl


GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.4

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sfgwhZ0s2nU

Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 15, 2009

EQUILIBRIUM~! Freemasonry's symbols suggest that humanity needs to be shape-shifted to "bee" in order to achieve EQUILIBRIUM. A "bee" is also called a ring. The Lord of the Rings is the Queen Bee. In a beehive, genders are not required except for procreation. Freemasonry believes this matter can be best handled by a single gender now known to philosophers as Ubermensch, Beyondman or Superman. "IT" is a Hermaphrodite. Secret Coding hidden in Language is the way they currently implement this plan. Faith based Organized Religion is their proof of its success. When all the kinks have finally been worked out through testing on their Guinea Pigs, presently known as the Human Race, humans will be destroyed and replaced with Beyondman. At that time the Black Capstone will be retrieved and flown from the Kaaba at Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, and deposited on top of the Great White Pyramid, at Giza in Egypt. The plan is an 8000 year criminal conspiracy, a Zoro-Astrian / Zoro-Babel Cabal known to some as the "Gulf of Aqaba Kabala" which is approaching its ultimate conclusion. The signs are all around. Thus Spake Zarathustra~!


Best Things to do in Massachusetts

Your RVF Lifestyle

RV Road Trip

RV-ing around the world

Best Things to do in Massachusetts

by J Rogers

https://www.your-rv-lifestyle.com/best-things-to-do-in-massachusetts/

The state of Massachusetts is named after the tribe who once lived in the area. The capital city is Boston, with over 80% of the population living there. Plymouth was the site of the first colony in New England. The climate in Massachusetts is classed as humid, with cold winters and warm summers. The climate of Boston is representative of the state, and there is frequent rain. In the winter there may be frost, even in coastal areas because of the prevailing winds. Because of the colder winters, there is plenty of indoor activity. You will find that Massachusetts has more than its fair share of interesting art galleries and museums.

1. The Freedom Trail

This is a 2.5-mile trail which will lead you through various areas of Boston. It was decided in 1951 to construct a trail linking many local landmarks. This is a very popular walking trail, with over 40,000 people walking it every year.
You will pass things like the Old State House, Paul Revere House, and the Old South Meeting House, to name a few.
Depending on how fast you walk, and how often you stop, this may take you a full day.

2. Bunker Hill Monument

This monument was erected to commemorate the Battle of Bunker Hill. This was one of the first battles between Britain and the Patriot Forces and took place in June 1775.

The obelisk is 221-foot high and the granite came from Quincy. You may note that there are 294 steps to the top, should you want to climb it.
Right next to the Monument you will find some late 19th century houses, and here you can see a statue of the fallen hero. Dr Joseph Warren.
Allow yourself a day for this, as across the road there is a museum you may also visit.

3. USS Constitution

This ship is one of the oldest commissioned naval vessels which still floats. It was launched in 1797, one of six, and built in Boston, at the north end.
You may know the ship for her role in the war of 1812, and also remember her nickname of ‘Old Ironsides’.
You can see the ship free of charge and take the guided tour (also free) on any day of the year. You will find the ship berthed at Pier 1 in the Navy Yard.

4. Fenway Park

If you love baseball, then this should be on your list to see! You will find it in Boston, near Kenmore Square. This is the oldest ballpark in the MLB. The arena also hosts soccer, concerts, and hockey games, so be sure to check what is upcoming.
If you want to see a game, then you should book in advance.

5. Essex Shipbuilding Museum

You will find this museum in Essex. It houses historical displays about the history of wooden shipbuilding in that area. A notable point is that Essex built more wooden fishing boats than anywhere else in the USA.
You will be able to see some intricate ship models, as well as half hulls, antique building tools, and many interesting photos.
Allow yourself at least a half day to see this.

6. Plimoth Plantation

This plantation is in Plymouth, and it is a replica of the original settlement in the Plymouth Colony from the 17th century.
The recreations are based on historical documents and period paintings, with ongoing research and excavations carried on site.
Kids will find that this is a really fun way to learn about earlier times.
You will find that guides are dressed in period costume, and even speak in character, so you may have to speak slowly when you ask a question and listen carefully to the answer!

7. Harvard University

Harvard is the oldest university in the USA and has gained an international reputation for its top class academic research and study facilities. You will find it in Cambridge.
You can take a free tour of the facility as long as you are guided by a current student at the university.
Spend a little time in Harvard Square as there are plenty of coffee shops and book stores. Additionally, you will find several excellent museums on campus which you can visit.

8. Pilgrim Monument

You will find this monument in Provincetown. It was built between 1907 and 1910 and commemorates the arrival of the Pilgrims in 1620. This is also where the signing of the Mayflower compact took place.
The monument is very popular with tourists who come to climb it. The view from the top is spectacular. You can see the town below.
If you are there at Christmas, you can enjoy the lights which are hung from top to bottom and are lit in November.

9. Boston Harbour

This harbour was used in the Colonial period as a shipping port. It was only renovated and made into a harbour in the 20th century.
There is a great walk named Harbour Walk, which is filled with beaches, parks, and many small cafes along the waterfront.
One of the most popular sections to be walked runs from South Boston to Charlestown. Here you will be able to see the Christopher Columbus Waterfront Park.
Allow yourself most of the day to enjoy the walk and the shops along the way.

10. Battleship CoveThis war museum is in Fall River and features the largest collection of WWII vessels in the world. You will also find the battleship USS Massachusetts here.

Allow yourself a full day to look around the area, there is a snack shop where you can get lunch.
Be sure to wear sturdy shoes as there is a lot of climbing up and down of ladders to get inside the ship.

11. Boston Common

This park marks the start of the Freedom Trail and is also the oldest park in the USA. There are many beautiful green spaces where you can take a picnic lunch and enjoy the scenery.
Look out for the historic burial ground, along with several other monuments.
If you see this in winter, you may be able to ice skate, but the spring is the best time when the park is at its best.
Be sure to check out the adjoining public garden, as this is the oldest botanical garden in the country.

12. Harvard Museum of Natural History

You will find this museum in the University of Howard. The collections comprise exhibits from the University herbaria, the Comparative Zoology, and the Mineralogy museum.
One admission fee will give you access to this museum, as well as the Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, making it an inexpensive day out.

13. New England Aquarium

You will find this aquarium in Boston. There are over 20,000 marine animals for you to look at.
Look for the Caribbean sharks and turtles, as well as many crabs, which the kids can touch in the ‘Edge of the Sea’ tank.
You can also book a whale watching tour and pay a visit to the Imax theatre to see short films on nature.
Allow yourself a full day here. There is a café where you can get lunch or snacks.

14. Boston Tea Party Ships & Museum

You will find this in Boston, on Congress Street Bridge. Prepare to meet actors dressed in period costumes, as well as interactive exhibits and authentically restored tea ships.
Abigail’s tea room is well worth a visit when you need to take a break from the excitement, and the gift shop is crammed with delightful things to see and buy.
If you take the guided tour, it will last you about an hour, and is suitable for all ages.

15. See Cape Cod

This beautiful area has a shoreline of about 500 miles of white, sandy beaches. If you enjoy walking along the shore, then this is a perfect spot.
The beaches get busy in the summer months, but you can always find a secluded area. Because the whole coast is protected by the Cape Cod National Seashore you will find it unchanged since the 19th century.
This is a great place to take an RV and stay a few days while you explore the coastline.

16. The Mapparium

This is in fact the new Christian Science Publishing Society Headquarters which was built in 1930. It is a three story ‘inside out’ stained glass globe.
This is a three-dimensional perspective of the world where you can take an audio tour and see how ideas and geography have changes the world.
The library is also a great place to have a look at.
Allow yourself an hour or two to see the globe, although you may stay longer in the library.

17. Martha’s Vineyard

This is a small island just south of Cape Cod and is known for the affluency of the inhabitants. It is the 58th largest island in the USA.
An interesting point here is that the island was home to one of the first deaf communities in the country.
It is only accessible by boat or plane, and you can get either of these on the mainland.
This is somewhere that you will want to spend a day, although it can be expensive.

18. Witch House of Salem

The Salem Witchcraft trials took place from 1692 – 1693, with 185 people being accused of witchcraft. 59 were tried, 31 found guilty, and 19 executed. They were hanged.
The witch house is so named after one of the judges, also a local civic leader, Jonathan Corwin. The Witch House was his home and is now the only building still standing in Salem.
You may take the guided tour of the house, which is a good idea as you will not be on your own in the spooky rooms!
Perhaps this is not suitable for children!

19. Boston Public Library

The library was founded in 1848 and contains over23 million items in all formats such as CD’s, DVD’s, music scores, manuscripts, books, prints and manuscripts.
The library is free to the public, and you can browse around at your leisure. It is the 3rd largest public library in the USA.
There is a coffee shop where you can get a snack during the day.

20. The Old State House

You will find this historic building in Boston, at the intersection of Washington and State Streets.
This is one of the oldest buildings in the USA. It was built in 1713, and until 1798 was the seat of the General Court of Massachusetts.
You will also see this if you follow the Freedom Walk route as it is along the way. Take the guided tour, as you will learn much more than if you walk around by yourself.

21. Waldon Pond

This is found just outside Concord, which is 15 miles northwest of Boston. There are 1.7 miles of beautiful shore, and while it is not the largest or prettiest lake in the USA, it is a delightful place to take a picnic and spend a sunny afternoon.
An interesting point here is that back in the early 19th century when ice was invented, water from this lake was used because it tasted so good.
The lake is perfect for swimming, and has plenty of fauna and flora around it, so allow yourself a full day here to relax.

22. Forest Hills Cemetery

This is a cemetery with a difference, as it comes with a miniature village! The cemetery winds around a beautiful lake which is the perfect combination of man-made and natural structures.
Even the graves are adorned with sculptures and the mausoleums have wonderful architectural details to them.
The village was added in 2006, with each small building being a replica of the home of the person who is buried there.
Look out for the home of Ralph Martin – he was the wagon driver who died in one of the most unusual disasters in the history of Boston, which was the Great Molasses Flood.
It will take you a half day to look around here.

23. The Minute Man National Historic Park

This park indicates the route taken by the British during the American revolution. In the park you will find the North Bridge of Concord, which was the battle site between the Colonies and the British Army.
There is an excellent visitor’s centre where you can learn more about that era, and also see several artefacts from the war.
You will be able to see most of this in a half a day, although you may want to walk around the park, which is delightful.

24. Six Flags New England

You will find this amusement park in Agawam. It dates back to the 19th century and is the first of the parks in this chain, which you will find in several states.
The most notable ride is ‘Superman the Ride’, which has won every award in the Golden Ticket Awards Publication.
If you enjoy roller coasters and rides, then make sure to include this on your list of things to do.
Allow yourself a full day here, the park also offers two-day tickets, so you can return!

25. Bodega

This is one of the most interesting shops in Boston! It is also one of the hardest to find.
The shop front is a convenience store on Clearway Street, and on entering you will think it no more than that. However, you need to head for the back of the shop and around the Snapple machine, when you will enter another world entirely.
Whether you are looking for jackets, shirts, or shoes, you will find the latest fashions here. Shelves filled with the most modern in sneakers and shoes, bags, and coats, this will simply blow your mind!

26. JFK Presidential Library and Museum

This is the library of the 35th President of the USA. You will find it on Columbia Point, in Boston. Here you will find original papers and correspondence from the Kennedy era, along with published and unpublished material.
You are welcome to look around. Look out for some interesting works such as those books and papers by and about Ernest Hemmingway.
It will take you about half a day to look around here.

27. New Bedford Whaling Museum

This museum is in New Bedford, and it focuses on the whaling industry in that region. You will find exhibits totalling over 750,000 including logbooks from whaling ships.
There is also a collection of works by American artists such as William Bradford and Albert Pinkham Ryder, along with a collection of glassware and furniture from that time.
Look out for the half scale model of a whaling ship that was commissioned in 1916, and to date is the largest model whaling ship in the world.

28. Lexington Green

This area is where the first shots of the American Revolution are believed to have been fired. It is also known as Battle Green, and it is in Lexington.
You will find the Minute Man Statue here, which immortalises Captain parker when he said – right before the battle – ‘if they mean to have war, let it begin here’.
If you are lucky, you will be there at the anniversary, and will be able to watch the re-enactments of the whole event.

29. The Old South Meeting House

This is a historical church building at the intersection of Washington and Milk Streets in Boston. It was built in 1729.
This was the place where the Boston Tea Party was arranged at, on December 16th, 1773 when over 5,000 colonists assembled at the Meeting House.
It will not take more than an hour or two to look around here, but the area is worth exploring as there are many interesting things there.

30. Lizzie Borden Museum

You will find this museum, and her bed and breakfast in Fall River. The B&B is reputed to be haunted.
The legend goes that back in 1892 Andrew and his wife Abby Borden were found murdered with their skulls caved in by the blows of a hatchet. Lizzie became the prime suspect as she was the first to find the bodies. Lizzie was in fact acquitted of the murders.
The museum contains artefacts from that horrid night, and there is a gift shop, should you wish to buy any memorabilia. Make sure you see Lizzie’s room as well as her father’s and step-mothers room.
You are welcome to stay overnight in either room – if you are brave enough.

31. USS Constitution Museum

The museum is found in Charleston Navy Yard, Boston. It is housed in a restored shipyard building at the end of Pier 2.
There are several exhibitions and collection which tell the story of the ship and all who sailed in her. Also, in the museum is the Samuel Eliot Morison Memorial Library which contains a good collection of records relating to the history of the ship.
Allow yourself at least a half day for this. There is a snack shop nearby where you can get lunch and refreshments.

32. See the Salada Tea Doors

You will find this amazing pair of doors in Boston. If you study the doors, you will be able to follow the history of the tea trade.
The doors stand 12-foot high and are made of bronze, weighing 2 tons each. You will see that there are ten panels which tell the story of the origin of tea.
Look for the scenes from Ceylon depicting farmers harvesting the leaves, then soring and drying them. Notice the elephants carrying the tea boxes to be loaded onto ships.
It is interesting to note that while the building has been sold many times, the doors have never been replaced.

33. Skywalk Observatory

You will find this in the Prudential Centre, in Boston. You can take the elevator up to the 50th floor where you will have a spectacular view of the city. On a clear day, you will be able to see about 100 miles into the distance.
Look out for such places as Fenway Park and Hancock’s Tower. There is a self-guided tour with a commentary, so you can take your time and look around.
The ticket price includes an audio tour along with a visit to the small theatre to watch four videos. There are even some interactive games for the kids.
You can stay up there up there as long as you like. Try to get there on a day that is not too cloudy.

34. Heritage Museum and Garden

These are to be found in Sandwich. The public gardens cover over 100 acres. You will see the most amazing collection of rhododendrons here, some of which were hybridized by Charles Dexter.
Look for the daylilies, there are over 1,000 varieties of them!
There is also a section on American Automobiles, folk art, and a working carousel from 1919.
Plan on spending a full day here as there is plenty to see, and a small café where you can get lunch.

35. Hammond Castle Museum

You will find this castle in Gloucester. It is the home of a very eccentric inventor, and one of the things that make it such an eccentric home is the weather system inside the castle!
Hammond built his castle complete with drawbridge, overlooking the Atlantic Ocean. You can tour the house and see the dining room, round library, and a War room. Not to mention the secret passages and the indoor pool. It is at the pool that Hammond installed his weather system so that if he wanted to swim in the rain, he could.
Be sure to check out the Garden Room which is built from pieces of buildings that Hammond liked. There are pieces from a meat market, wine merchant, and an ancient church.
Allow yourself a full day as not only is the house worth looking at, the garden is delightful.

36. Eat Fried Clams

No trip to Massachusetts would be complete without tasting one of the traditional dishes. You will find the best spot to get fried clams is in ‘Woodman’s’ in Essex. They actually claim to have first perfected this dish.
Your dish of fried clams will be served with a helping of fries and onion rings. Make sure that after you have ordered your clams, you head to the drinks counter and order a beer to go with them.

37. Warren Anatomical Museum

You will find this inside the Harvard Medical School, in the Library of Medicine. It was founded in 1847, and the collection includes some very unusual items.
Among the 15,000 artefacts you will find the first inhaler used to demonstrate ether-assisted surgery. You will also see the skull of one Phineas Gage. Mr gage survived an attack where he had a large iron bar driven through his brain.
This museum may not be suitable for children.

38. Caffe Vittoria

Not only is this the oldest Italian Restaurant in Boston, but it is also the home of a museum of vintage coffee paraphernalia. You will find it in Boston.
You can see the collection of vintage coffee machines and coffee makers, along with a vast collection of mugs and posters – all about coffee.
If you love Italian food and a decent cup of coffee, then this should go on your list of things to do.

39. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

This museum is located in the Fenway area of Boston. There is an interesting collection of art which is from all over the world, notably European, Asian, and American art.
Look for the tapestries which are stunning, and the sculptures. An interesting point here is that in 1990 the museum was burgled. Thirteen pieces of work were stolen, which to date have not been recovered.
It will take you a half day to see this.

40. The Stellwagen Bank

If you want to see whales, then this is where you should go, as it is known as one of the best whale-watching spots in the entire world!
You should be able to pick out the humpbacks who return each summer. Apart from whales, you will be able to see seals and dolphins.
There are many whale watching tours which leave from Gloucester, which you can join for a great day of whale-watching.

41. Mount Greylock

This mountain is located in Adams. It is the highest peak in the state, at 3,491 feet above sea-level.
You can either drive to the top on Notch Road, or hike between May and October. There are several trails to follow, one of them being the Appalachian Trail.
At the top you can see the War Memorial Tower which stands 93 feet high and was built in 1932. You will also find Bascom Lodge up there, which is a hotel built by the Civilian Conservation Corps in 1930.
An interesting point here is that it is thought that Mount Greylock is the setting for the North American School of Wizardry, from JK Rowling’s books – you decide.

42. Old Sturbridge Village

This living village is in Sturbridge, and it is often used for educational field trips. It is also very popular with tourists.
The village re-creates rural life between 1790 and 1830, with inhabitants wearing period costumes and demonstrating rural farm life.
There is a total of 59 antique buildings, along with three water-powered mills.
This is a great day to take children and you should plan to spend the entire day here.

43. See the Ancient Crypt

You will find this in the basement of the Old North Church in Boston. For a fee, the Anglican Church buried parish members in the crypt. The largest tomb is called ‘Strangers Tomb’, which holds 45 children and adults who perished from Smallpox in 1813.
Look for the plot that holds the bodies of British soldiers killed on Bunker Hill.
The church no longer uses the crypt for burials. You can take a guided tour of the basement for a small donation.
This may not be suitable for children.

44. Southwick Zoo

You will find this zoo in Mendon. It is family-operated and owned and opened first in 1963. This is a great day out for all ages.
Look out for the deer forest, where you will see, and be able to feed fallow deer. You can walk through the forest and will come across turkeys, hawks, and turtles.
Head for the Discover Earth Centre where you will find animals such as bush babies, porcupines, snakes, and bearded dragons to name a few.
Plan on spending the entire day here. There is a café where you can buy lunch and refreshments.

45. Manchester-by-the-Sea

Here you will find what is known as the ‘Singing Beach’. The phenomenon has yet to be fully explained but it is widely thought that the friction between the sand grains makes a ‘singing’ sound.
You will hear the sounds best if you head for the dry side above the high tide lines. Normally the singing happens with three conditions in favour, namely when the sand is round and between 0.1 and 0.5 mm wide, when it contains silica, and when the humidity is just right.
Surprisingly, this is a huge tourist attraction, with crowds gathering to listen, so be sure you arrive early to get parking. Preferably you should be there by 11am.

46. The Bulb River

This is found in Sandwich. It is a river of grape hyacinths which flow down a garden hill. The river is made up of over 35,000 flowers!
If you are fortunate to get there on a day when there is a slight breeze, it will appear as if the river is flowing. Typically, the bulbs are at their best in early May, which is around Mother’s Day in the USA.
Once you have stood and admired the river make sure you head to the rhododendron collection, which covers 100 acres, and holds literally thousands of the plants.

47. Deerfield

There are 14 historic, preserved homes here which tell the story of the Federal and Colonial periods.
You will find over 27,00 artefacts dating back as early as the 17th century.
Make sure you visit the Helen Geier Textile Gallery to get an idea of not only what the settlers wore, but how they made their clothes.
Stay for the demonstrations of crafts and cookery to learn a little more of that time.
You can easily stay a full day here, there are places where you can buy lunch through the day.

48. Peabody Essex Museum

This museum was founded in 1799 and holds one of the biggest collections of Asian art in the USA.
There are over 1.3 million items in the museum, as well as 22 historic buildings.
This museum is among the top 20 art museums in the country, and in the top ten in terms of footage.
There are over 840,000 works of art and culture, many of them to do with history, American art. Asian, African, and Oceanic art.
Spend some time in either of the two large libraries which house over 40,000 books and manuscripts.
You will be able to look around this museum in a half day, although if you want to stay longer, there is no time-frame.

49. Edgar Allen Poe Square

This square in Boston is dedicated to the poet who was born close-by. Neither the house where he was born, nor the street where he lived are there anymore as the entire area was demolished many years ago. However, in 2009 on the 200th anniversary of Poe’s birth the plaza opened up to commemorate Poe.
Look out for the plaque dedicated to him. It will not take very long to see this, but the plaza and vicinity have many interesting shops to look at, and plenty of cafes where you can get a snack through the day, so you may think about spending a full day here.

50. Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway

This park is to be found in downtown Boston. The park is filled with promenades, fountains, art, and beautifully landscaped gardens. Officially, the park opened in 2008.
Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy Greenway was the matriarch of the Kennedy family who were born close-by. Edward Kennedy played a large part in establishing the Greenway.
The park is a wonderful place to take a picnic lunch on a summer day and enjoy the surroundings.

51. Forbes Pigment Collection

You will find this in Cambridge. The collection began in the early 20th century, until it grew into a library of thousands of colours.
Some are toxic, while others are rare. Every item is carefully documented and preserved, and while this may not take you very long to see, it is worth looking at, just to see how many Shades of Grey there really are!

52. Paul Revere House

This was the home of the patriot Paul Revere during the American Revolution, and it is now a National Historic Landmark.
The house was built in 1680 which makes it the oldest house in Boston. Typical of the style in Massachusetts, the main part of the house was made up of four bays marked by heavy posts and overhead beams.
The larger room had the fireplace and chimney, while other parts held the kitchen buildings. The style of the house is exactly as they would have been back then.
There is a small fee to see the inside of the house and it will not take you longer than a half day, but it is worth it to see the inside and the artefacts of that era.

53. Institute of Contemporary Art

Often referred to as ICA, this art museum is located in Boston, and was founded in 1936 to exhibit contemporary art.
The museum focuses on the works of up-and-coming artists. Look for the Sandra and Gerald Fineberg Art Wall, which is in the lobby.
There is a biannual exhibition for local artists which is worth seeing. Make sure you see the West gallery where you will find individual and group exhibitions such as ‘Super Vision’, and works by Mark Bradford, Tara Donovan, and Anish Kapoor, to name a few.

54. Dr Seuss Sculpture Garden

This garden is found in Springfield, and you will be able to see life-size statues of the author, as well as characters such as the Grinch, Yertle the Turtle, Cat in the Hat, and others.
The garden was built in 1996 by the step-daughter of the author as a tribute to his work. Look out for the many other sculptures scattered around the garden.
Right next to the garden you will find a museum which will tell you everything you ever wanted to know about Dr Seuss!

55. USS Massachusetts

This battleship is found in Battleship Cove, Fall River. She was fondly known as ‘Big Mamie’ during WWII. She was the 7th ship to be named after a state, and one of two ships to be donated for use as a museum. The other ship is the USS Alabama.
You can take the guided tour which is very informative, or you can explore the ship on your own.
A point here is that the USS Massachusetts fired the first and the last of the shells in the war.
Allow at least half a day to see the ship, although you may take longer looking around the area.

56. Edward Gorey House

You will find this house in Yarmouth. It is filled with unusual and eclectic collections, interesting artwork, and resident cats!
When the author passed away in 2000, the house was found to be crammed full of over 25,000 books, several cats, and an assorted collection of interesting items. The easiest thing to do was to transform the house into a museum, for the public to enjoy.
Look out for the secret door at the back of a closet which is where he was reputed to have kept his collection of children’s books.
Allow at least a half day to see the house and all the collections.

57. The Emperor’s Garden Restaurant

This is in Boston and is well-known as the best Dim Sum Restaurant in Boston. It is located in the Grand Old Theatre.
Notice the ornate, high ceilings of the old movie theatre. There is always a line waiting for tables between 11am and 2pm, but if you arrive right at 2pm, you will find that you are seated right away as the lunch crowd has finished.
The menu is extensive, with such things as Chicken Foot available most days.
Allow yourself the afternoon to have some of the best Dim Sum in the city!

58. Museum of Fine Arts

This is the 5th largest museum in the USA, containing more than 450,000 different items. You will find the museum in Boston.
The museum is the 55th most visited place in the world, with more than 1 million visitors each year.
You can see such things as Dutch Golden Age paintings, Egyptian artefacts, jewellery, among other things.
There is a huge collection of Japanese works, with over 5000 pieces of Japanese pottery. Look out for the Rothschild Collection of over 130 items from Australia.
Allow yourself a full day to see this museum.

59. Museum of Modern Renaissance

This former Masonic Hall is found in Somerville. The style of work is known as ‘Mystical realism’, with the walls and ceilings covered with fresco-like paintings and mythological scenes.
Be sure to see the focal point which is the Great Hall. The colours which were used for the tiger, and bull totems, birds, and mermaids are of saturated oils for an unforgettable night on the fiord.
Allow yourself a half day to see the museum.

60. Armenian Library & Museum of America (ALMA)

You will find this in Watertown. This museum has the largest collection of Armenian artefacts in North America.
You will see collections of medieval and ancient coins, ceramic items, and prehistoric religious things.
There are over 900 rare books in the museum, and 170 Armenian rugs which were donated in 1992.
You will be able to see the museum in a half a day.

61. Old North Church

This church is in North End, Boston, and is the oldest standing church building in Boston. It is also a National heritage landmark.
You are welcome to look inside the church where you will find a statue of George Washington, which is supposed to be the best likeness to the president ever made.
An interesting point here is that this is where the famous signal about Paul Revere’s ride was sent. It was ‘One if by land, two if by sea’, and you can read all about it here.
It will only take a half day to see this, but it is well-worth it.

62. Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Arts (MoCA)

This museum is to be found in a converted factory building in North Adams. It is one of the biggest centres for performing arts in the USA.
Before it was a museum, it was the Sprague Electric Company, and only became a museum in 1942.
There is an annual festival which includes concerts and music. This is run through the summer months, so if possible try to see one of those events.
If you plan to attend an event, make sure you book in advance.

63. The Arnold Arboretum

You will find this in the Jamaica Plain region of Boston. There are over 14,000 plants as well as a fully stocked nursery. Many are from North America and Asia.
Look out for species of the Acer, Pinus, and Magnolia family, to name a few. There is also a wonderful collection of conifers.
This is a great place to spend a morning or afternoon, looking at the beautiful gardens.

64. Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute

This is both an art museum, and a research centre, and it is found in Williamstown. You will find collections of European and American paintings here, along with many prints, sketches, and photographs from the 14th to 20th centuries.
This is a very popular place for tourists, with over 200,000 tourists each year.
Allow yourself most of the day here, as there is plenty to see.

65. The Berkshires

This is an area, rather than one place. It is a highland region in the western part of the state. The mountains form part of the Appalachians and are wonderful for anyone who enjoys walking or hiking.
This is also a great place to take an RV as in the summer there are many interesting things happening such as music and art performances.
An interesting point here is that the Berkshires are noted as one of the last 200 great Places in the world.

66. Tanglewood

This music venue is held in the town of Stockbridge and has been the home of the Boston Symphony Orchestra since 1937. There are also three music schools at the centre.
Apart from hosting classical music performances, the centre also plays host to the Festival of Contemporary Music, with jazz and pop artists contributing.
Make sure you book in advance if you plan to attend a performance.

67. Newbury Street

If you love shopping, then this is where you should head! You will find it in the Back Bay section of Boston.
Anything, and everything can be found here, from made-to-measure suits, shoes, jewellery, and handbags. Many of the shoes are names such as Cartier and Zara, while often you will see pop-up stores during the year.
Plan on spending a full day here, there are plenty of restaurants to get lunch during the day.

68. Faneuil Hall

Not only is this a marketplace, it is also a meeting hall. You will find it in the Government Centre in Boston.
Many important speeches have been delivered here, such as those made by Samuel Adams and James Otis, along with others.
You may also have heard this referred to as ‘The Cradle of Liberty’ and will see it if you follow the Freedom Trail.
This is one of the most visited sites in the USA, and you may want to spend a full day in the area.

69. DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum

This is located on the shores of Flint’s Pond in Lincoln. This is the largest park of its kind in the county, encompassing over 30 acres.
Not only will you be able to see beautiful gardens, but there are over 60 works of art such as sculptures throughout the park.
Inside the museum there are rotating exhibitions mostly on photography, with work by local artists who have connections to the state.
Allow yourself a half day to see this.

70. Children’s Museum

This museum is in Boston and is the 2nd oldest children’s museum in the USA. There are many different areas to see.
The gallery is dedicated to artwork, while the Japanese House is a real house from Kyoto, Japan.
Be sure to visit Johnny’s Workbench where kids can see hand tools and wood carvings in progress.
This is a great place to spend a full day with the kids. There is a shop where you can buy lunch.

71. New England Aquarium

You will find this aquarium in Boston. It is a very popular tourist attraction, with about 1.3 million visitors each year.
Be sure to check out the jellyfish tank, and the harbour seals. There are also three California Sea Lions behind the aquarium.
Kids and adults will enjoy watching the daily training sessions as well as the feeding times, so allow yourself most of the day here.

72. Edaville Railroad

This is one of the oldest railroad operations in the USA. It opened in 1947. You will find it is South Carver.
Note that this is a 2-ft narrow gauge line. There are tours that you can take on the train, make sure that you book then in advance as they are extremely popular with tourists.

73. Copley Square

This is a public square in Boston’s Back Bay area. It used to be called Art Square until 1883.
Within the immediate vicinity you will find many things to see such as the Museum of Fine Arts, Public Library, and Trinity Church.
An interesting point is that this is where the Boston Marathon race finished in 1986, and you will find a memorial to this near Dartmouth Street.
There is enough to see and do in this area for you to plan a full day here.

74. Norman Rockwell Museum

You will find this art museum in Stockbridge. It was dedicated to the works of Norman Rockwell, and is home to the largest collection of original works by Rockwell in the world.
You will also find the Norman Rockwell archives which include a collection of over 100,000 items including fan mail, photographs, and business documents.
Allow yourself a half day here, although you may take longer if you want to explore the town.

75. The Museum of Science (MoS)

This science museum and indoor zoo are located in Boston in the Science Park. You will find over 700 interactive displays and live presentations on most days.
The zoo is home to over 100 animals, many of which have been rehabilitated or rescued. Be sure to check out the Butterfly House where you will see many exotic specimens.
There are plenty of science activities for kids such as the collection of optical illusions, and the room of mathematical exhibits.
Kids will thank you for spending a full day here!

76. Mary Baker Eddy Library

Here in Boston you will find the library which contains all the papers of Mary Baker Eddy. She was the founder of Christian Science.
There are hundreds of original manuscripts and documents which have been preserved here along with original letters from Mary baker Eddy.
It may take you just a few hours to look around here, but you should plan to see the Mapparium at the same time and make a full day of it.

77. The Museum of Bad Art (MOBA)

This interesting collection of art is found in Somerville, with a second branch in Brookline. It is a privately-owned museum whose sole aim is to exhibit pieced of art too bad to be ignored. You will find over 500 such pieces of work.
The museum was founded when an antique dealer found a painting in the trash. Friends suggested he start a collection, and things grew from there.
All the works are original and have serious intent, although they should have serious flaws which preclude them from regular exhibitions.
This is truly an unusual museum which celebrates the artist’s right to frail – gloriously!

78. Tower Hill Botanic Garden

You will find this spectacular garden in Boylston. It is about 8 miles north of Worcester. The garden has 17 different sub-sections, as well as preserved woodlands, and miles of great walking trails.
You will also find the headquarters of the Horticultural Society here. This is the 3rd oldest horticultural society in the USA.
Allow yourself at least a morning here, although if you enjoy walking, then you may stay longer than this.

79. Franklin Park Zoo

This zoo is found in Boston, in the northeast section of Franklin Park. The zoo was first opened to the public in 1912, and since then has opened several new exhibits, including Bird’s World in 1975.
This is a great place to spend a day, especially if you have kids. Try to stay at feeding time.
There is a café where you can get lunch and refreshments.

80. House of Seven Gables

Anyone who has read works by Nathaniel Hawthorne, will know about this house. It is 340 years old, and his novel by the same name was based on the actual house in the city.
For a small fee you can take a guided tour of the house. Make sure you take the option of climbing through the narrow, secret passageway, which was later added to the original house.
You can see many displays of Hawthorne’s works and artefacts from his life there.
Just a few blocks away you will find a statue of the man himself.

81. Bash Bish Falls

You will find this in Mount Washington, and while it may be one of the most scenic falls in the state, it has a history and a grim legend.
Legend has it that Bash Bish – a Mohican woman – lived in the village. Being accused of adultery, she was tied to a canoe and sent over the falls. Her body was never found.
Whatever you choose to believe, this is worth a visit for the beauty of the area. Just take care near the Falls!

82. Glacial Potholes

You will find these on the Deerfield River, at Shelburne Falls, near the Bridge of Flowers. There are over 50 whirling pools from the age of glaciers.
This is the largest collection of natural potholes in the world and is also the site of the largest pothole on record.
The pools range from 6” to 30” across and are best visible at the end of winter when water levels rise.
Years ago, it was possible to soak in the cool waters from the potholes but now you can only look at them as swimming there is illegal and done at your own risk.

83. Harvard Museum of Natural History

This museum is in Cambridge and has more wonders per square inch than most others in the country!
There are over 21 million exhibits, one of them being a full sized assembled skeleton of a Dodo. You will find a collection of human skulls, along with many other oddities.
This museum rates as one of the most interesting museums with some of the best collections of natural wonders of the known and unknown.
It is worth allowing yourself a full day to visit here.

84. Eyrie House Ruins

If you want to see something spooky, then head for this house. You will find it is Holyoke. The ruins of the House/Hotel are on top of Mount Nonotuck.
Legend has it that the house caught fire when the cremation of a horse turned horribly wrong. The only thing that was left were the walls of the understory. Because the owner, Mr Street was not insured, he was unable to rebuild the house. He lived as a recluse until the state bought the ruins and paid him a check for $5000. Being a proud man, Street never touched the money.
It will only take an hour or two to walk around the ruins but look out for Mr Street!

85. Echo Bridge

This amazing bridge is found in Newton. It was completed in 1877 and is a scenic arch which connects the banks of the Hemlock and the Charles Rivers.
Apart from the breath-taking views, the bridge is known for the amazing echoes. There is a platform where you can produce your own echoes. Notice that short, sharp sounds can echo up to 25 times.
Theories differ as to why the echoes are so great here, but the wonderful scenery makes this a worthwhile outing.

86. Lucy Parson’s Centre

This is a bookshop found in Boston. The books are unusual in that they are classed as ‘radical’. The shop was founded in 1969 and used to be called the ‘Red Book’.
You will also fi d that they host many different meetings for activist groups, cultural, and educational events. Often there are book signings and on Wednesdays there are movies which start at 7pm.

87. Ponyhenge

You will find this phenomenon in Lincoln. No one is certain how the old hobby horses appear, but there is an assortment of broken-down rocking horses all set in a small field in the town.
Sometime in 2010 some plastic and metal horses arrived anonymously, which led to the name of the field.
No one knows why, but horses and horse figurines began to appear at the site. Often, they have been re-arranged in rows like race horses, and sometimes in circles. Occasionally it looks as if they have all been knocked over.
The peculiar thing is that no-one seems to take them away.
You decide for yourself what lies behind the hobby horses, but it does make for an interesting day out!

88. Metropolitan Waterworks Museum

You will find this museum at the original Chestnut Hill Reservoir in Boston. It was built in 1887 and pumped water for Boston until the 1970’s.
The Waterworks were left to deteriorate until they were taken over by the Friends of the Waterworks Organisation, and lovingly restored to their former glory.
You will be able to see the most remarkable machines here, as well as amazing architecture.
Be sure to check out the Great Engine Hall, where you will see three historic steam-powered engines.

89. Kelleher Rose Garden

You will find this delightful park hidden in the centre of Boston. Residents regard it as their own secret.
The park was founded in 1931 and now has over 1,500 roses of every shade you can imagine!
The garden is not easily seen from the road as it hides behind a tall green yew hedge, but it is in the Back Bay Fens area.
This is a perfect place to take a picnic lunch and enjoy the splendour of the roses. It is particularly wonderful when all the roses are in bloom.

90. See the Glass Flowers at Harvard Museum

You will find these amazing things at Harvard Museum of Natural History. In the mid 1800’s obtaining floral artefacts for museums was a problem as they all died before they were properly preserved.
The unique collection now contains over 4,000 models representing more than 800 plant species. They were designed and created by glass artisans father and son Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka, who were from Dresden in Germany.
It will only take an hour or two to see them, but they are worth the effort as the minute details are magnificent.

91. Great Boston Molasses Flood

Most people will have read this heading twice! Yes, there was in fact a molasses flood in which a deadly wave of molasses travelling at 35mph destroyed a neighbourhood and took many lives.
In Boston, at the intersection of Commercial Street and Copps Hill terrace you will find a small plaque in honour of the people who died there.
The tank company had an accident with one of the holding tanks and molasses poured into the town, with devastating results. The area was said to have smelled sweet and be sticky for many years after the clean-up.
It will not take you long to see, but it is worth looking at the location of one of the strangest disasters in the world!

92. Rutland Prison Camp

Here in Rutland you will see the ruins of the prison farm where in years gone by, drunkards were put to work to grow potatoes for the more hardened prisoners.
In 1903 the prison was constructed to house minor offenders and had a fully working farm to keep them busy and productive.
The reason that the prison closed, despite it becoming a very successful farm, was due to the grounds being built on the drainage area for local water supply. The prison was abandoned and crumbled away.

93. Skinny House

This is the narrowest house in Boston and it is hidden between taller houses. You will see that the house is only 10-feet wide and 30-feet deep. Legend has it that the house was built out of rage to block the sunlight from the house behind it.
Whatever the reason, it is still an interesting topic of conversation in any bar in town! The present owners say that they did once have a New Year’s Eve party where they fitted 10 guests inside!

94. Site of the Boston Massacre

You will find this site in Boston. Outside the Old State House, you will see the circular cobblestone design which indicates the place where the fallen patriots lay.
Tragically soldiers fired on a crowd and five people were killed. It was Paul Revere who afterwards responded by creating an engraving of the scene.
It will not take you too long to see this, but you may want to stay a day in the area as there is plenty to see and do.

95. The Tiny Museum

This is undoubtedly the smallest museum in the USA! You will find it nestled next door to a sandwich shop in Somerville. The sign from the shop reads ‘We Bake Our Own Bread’, and right next door you will find the museum.
The owner has used this alley for displaying local art and it is very pleasing to wander up and down looking at this fine display, even if you bump elbows with other people!

96. Polcari’s Coffee

You will find this coffee house in Boston. It is more of an institution than a coffee shop, with bins and jars stacked against the walls. It is on Salem Street.
Not only does the shop sell and stock coffee, but you will find a huge assortment of interesting things such as coffee pots, herbs, pasta, and nuts.
Treat yourself to a cup of the most delicious coffee in the city!

97.Harmonic Bridge

This amazing place is found in North Adams. Two artists called Bruce Odland and Sam Auinger attached two 16-foot long resonating tubes to the base of the highway overpass, then placed microphones at intervals to pick up sounds.
There are speakers encased in concrete on either side of the road and if you stand there, you will hear the hum which is generated by this.
If you are musical you will work out that the hum is in fact a ‘C’, with the sound wave being over 16 feet long.
Locals look on the sound as the ‘noise of the urban world’. It will only take you an hour or so depending on the traffic, to hear this. After that you may want to hear to the town for lunch.

98. Grave of the Boston Strangler

This is to be found in Peabody, and is the final resting place of the mane reputed to have murdered many people in the 1960’s.
During the period between 1962 and 1964 the infamous Boston Strangler raped and murdered about a dozen women between 19 and 85 years of age.
After being imprisoned for six years, DeSalvo was found stabbed to death in his cell, and he is buried in this quiet cemetery. You will notice that there is no tombstone, just a small bronze plaque to mark the spot.

99. Nobska Point Lighthouse

You will find the lighthouse in Falmouth. You will notice the views when you look out towards Martha’s Vineyard.
This is a great place for walking a hiking. This is also a lovely area to take an RV and spend a few days. Be aware that there are no facilities or café here, so you must bring your own provisions.
It is a wonderfully peaceful spot with magnificent views.

100. Try Baked Alaska

This is a part of local culture and will be on pretty much every menu you see. Boston likes to claim this creation as their own.
There are many different ways to fill and serve this delicious dessert, such as filled with passion fruit caramel, and covered with coconut ice-cream, to name just one.
Make sure that at least once on your holiday, you stop for some of this!

Summary of Best Things to do in Massachusetts



Massachusetts has something to offer everyone, whether you enjoy walking, visiting museums or just relaxing in a park. 

There is just so much to see and do here, you will wonder why you’ve never been before!

 

Star Spangled Banner

 by Fenton Trevellian

 America America you are going down the drain

 And I wonder who is to blame

 Once you had so much fame

 With your movie stars, And glamorous cars

You sung the star spangled banner with such pride

Until someone dropped a spanner in the works

But you called it a wrench

Now people think you are sillier than the pretentious French

Was it the hedge funds or banks with their ridiculous loans?

That dropped you in the stew

Or maybe just too many greedy Zionist Jews

In the banks, Poor old yanks

You will never get any thanks

You may have put a man on the moon

But back then you played a different tune

So who will put you back on track

 If only Britton ran the world

It would be much nicer place

Much more give and take

And not so fake


For comments, questions, ideas for discussion about Fenton Trevellian's poem Star Spangle Banner or any other subject you want to discuss with Fenton Trevellian the out spoken author and poet.... please write to Fenton Trevellian at
admin@awn.bz

Please look out for Fenton Trevellian's new page on www.inlnews.com
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Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl

GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.5

Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 16, 2009

You can only RE~SEARCH : while ancient Troglodytes did the original SEARCH ! He guided the Greeks on their expeditions to the East. He secretly guides Western Freemasonry. Today, He is the priest, their Unknown Superior (Jaques~Basque). This is how ancient subterranean Troglodyte Priests described themselves to outsiders in 1894. It is a step-by-step explanation given only to selected Masons within a context premised by Zoro-Astrian Freemasonry's "business plan" (they call it prophecies) which, at that time, urgently required a quantum leap in scientific discovery if they were to ‹learn to flyŠ and remain on schedule for their planned "End of the Earth" rendez-vous (before the year 2059). "He was verily a wonderful being; an eyeless creature (metaphorically speaking), and yet possessed of sight and perception beyond that of mortal man; a creature who had been locked in the earth, and yet was more familiar with its surface than a philosopher; a cavern-bred monstrosity, and yet possessed of the mind of a sage; he was a scientific expert, a naturalist, a metaphysical reasoner, a critic of religion, and a prophet. He could see in absolute darkness as well as in daylight; without a compass he could guide a boat over a trackless sea, and could accomplish feats that throw Gulliver and Munchausen into disrepute." Troglodytes "predict" the future by means of their first-hand knowledge of the most ancient past and of what they are about to orchestrate. It‰s no miracle. I do not remember to have said that they were cavern-bred; they did. Did I say they were always cavern beings? Did I assert that they had never lived among us mortals of upper surface earth? Do you only believe only what you see, or believe that all what others can do, you can do also? If so, then please, let me see you kiss your elbow. Once you dare relate ultimate reality others will call you mad, and the more clearly you attempt to explain the facts that you have witnessed, the less they will listen to you; such has been the fate of others when confronting the BRAINDEAD. Freemasons such as Jim and Brother Steve are programmed to play upon this fact. Forgive them ~ they know not what they do. The price of being truthful is that twenty people will reject your views for everyone that considers them as being possible or even plausible. Therefore, before you speak you must first learn to live with rejection.

 The SculPTor (who comes in on their ass)


Dark Secrets of the Rockefeller Family

Dark Secrets of the Rockefeller Family

strictlyrevolution

Published on Jul 18, 2015

Full 2015 documentary about how the Rockefeller family has become one of the most wealthy and most powerful families on earth. ________________________________________ 1. Early life of John D. Rockefeller This video shows the chronological time-line of the Rockefeller family, starting with how William Avery 'Devil Bill' Rockefeller Sr. (1810-1906) schooled his son John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) to be a cunning businessman. 'Devil Bill' Rockefeller's son John D. Rockefeller became successful in the commodities trade at a very young age 2. The creation of the biggest oil monopoly in the world. John D. Rockefeller then decided to seek his fortune elsewhere and moved to Cleveland Ohio, where the oil business began to boom. There he established an oil refinery and gained prosperity through cunning plots, ruthlessness, conspiracy, shady deals and other criminal deeds. John D's. "Standard Oil" company would grow and expand to become the biggest oil monopoly in the world. The Standard Oil monopoly got so big and powerful, that in 1911, the U.S. Supreme Court decided that the oil company violated the US Antitrust Law and that it had to be split up. This created various new successful Rockefeller oil companies, such as Exxon-Mobil (Esso), Chevron Corporation, Texaco and Gulf Oil. Having a positive effect on the stock market, the 1911 Supreme Court decision in effect made the Rockefeller family even more rich and powerful. The Rockefellers have always had intimate business and family relations with other powerful family dynasties, such as the Morgan banking family, members of the steel magnates of the Carnegie family, the DuPont family and the Rothschild banking families from Europe. The Rockefellers were connected to the Union Pacific Railroad company of E.H. Harriman. They were involved in the sponsorship of the Kuhn & Loeb bank in the United Kingdom and they had numerous business deals with Hitler's Nazi regime in Germany. There were the instrumental force behind the German chemical company I.G. Farben, which built and controlled the concentration camp Auschwitz, situated around the I.G. Farben chemical factory. Rockefeller's Standard Oil patented fuel even powered the entire Nazi air force 'the Luftwaffe'. 3. David Rockefeller in the 20th and 21st century. During the 20th century David Rockefeller and other descendants of John D. Rockefeller maintained their wealth through banking, oil and expanded their power through politics and think-tanks or other non government organisations (NGOs). David Rockefeller, the oldest member of the Rockefeller family, is one of the founding members of the secretive Bilderberg Group, the Trilateral Commission and the Council on Foreign Relations. 4. The full dominance of the Rockefeller empire The power of the Rockefeller family is not limited to the oil industry, they control large portions of the banking industry, the central banking system in the US through the Federal Reserve and overseas the European Central Bank. Through Rockefeller-controlled companies, organisations, think-tanks and other NGO's the family created The United Nations, Bilderberg Group, Trilateral Commission, Council on Foreign Relations, Planned Parenthood, the Population Council, the Council of the Americas and the Rockefeller Foundation. Among other Rockefeller companies are: Monsanto, United Airlines, American Airlines, American Railroads, AT&T, Honeywell, Quaker Oats, and AXA Equitable Life Insurance. The estimated combined Rockefeller fortune is so big that it can be expressed in percentages of the entire US economy. The ultimate plan of these international oligarchs is to enslave humanity under a tyrannical one world government, ruled and controlled by them. __________________________________________________________

Please share this video and make it go viral so that the Rockefeller family (among a few others) can be stopped and b



100 Best Things to do in Austria

by Jen Miller

Jen Reviews

https://www.jenreviews.com/best-things-to-do-in-austria/

Hidden in the heart of Europe lies the land of emperors, waltz and schnitzel. A paradise for skiers, hikers and city lovers all in one. From the steep hills of the Alps to the magnificent palaces of Vienna, every tourist can find something just to their taste.

Austria is the home of famous classical composers like Mozart, psychologist Sigmund Freud and architect Hundertwasser. Its history is rich with wars, splendor and intrigue. The rich culture, which has produced countless pieces of art, music, plays and books is present throughout the country. And for the foodies: get ready to enjoy the delicious local cuisine.

Below we have gathered the top attractions as well as the best-kept secrets, hidden places and off-the-beaten track surprises to make your stay in Austria unforgettable.

America may be first, but let Austria be second. Let’s take a look at what you should not miss when you visit the “eastern realm”:

100 Best Things to do in Austria

by Jen Miller

Jen Reviews

https://www.jenreviews.com/best-things-to-do-in-austria/

Hidden in the heart of Europe lies the land of emperors, waltz and schnitzel. A paradise for skiers, hikers and city lovers all in one. From the steep hills of the Alps to the magnificent palaces of Vienna, every tourist can find something just to their taste.

Austria is the home of famous classical composers like Mozart, psychologist Sigmund Freud and architect Hundertwasser. Its history is rich with wars, splendor and intrigue. The rich culture, which has produced countless pieces of art, music, plays and books is present throughout the country. And for the foodies: get ready to enjoy the delicious local cuisine.

Below we have gathered the top attractions as well as the best-kept secrets, hidden places and off-the-beaten track surprises to make your stay in Austria unforgettable.

America may be first, but let Austria be second. Let’s take a look at what you should not miss when you visit the “eastern realm”:

Contents

  • 1. Schonbrunn Imperial Summer Palace (Vienna)
  • 2. Take a Walk through Vienna’s Historic Center (Vienna)
  • 3. Coffee and Cake in Salzburger Altstadt – Salzburg Old Town (Salzburg)
  • 4. Klimt in the Belvedere Palace Museum (Vienna)
  • 5. Kunsthistorisches Museum – Art History Museum (Vienna)
  • 6. Visit World’s Oldest Zoo (Vienna)
  • 7. A Walk through Schonbrunner Gardens (Vienna)
  • 8. Prater (Vienna)
  • 9. Hofburg Imperial Palace (Vienna)
  • 10. State Opera House (Vienna)
  • 11. Grossglockner Alpine Road Drive (Heiligenblut)
  • 12. View of Vienna from St. Stephen’s Cathedral (Vienna)
  • 13. Dinner at Salzburg Fortress (Salzburg)
  • 14. Christmas Market at City Hall Rathaus (Vienna)
  • 15. Kitzbuhel Ski Resort (Kitzbuhel)
  • 16. Sound of Music Tour at Mirabell Palace & Gardens (Salzburg)
  • 17. Cable Car Trip in the Alps to Innsbrucker Nordkette (Innsbruck)
  • 18. Albertina (Vienna)
  • 19. Natural History Museum (Vienna)
  • 20. Overview of Vienna on the Ringstrasse (Vienna)
  • 21. Knowledge at Melk Abbey (Melk)
  • 22. Nationalbibliothek – National Library (Vienna)
  • 23. Untersberg (Salzburg)
  • 24. Classical Concert at St. Peter’s Church (Vienna)
  • 25. Salzburg Cathedral (Salzburg)
  • 26. Museums Galore at Museumsquartier (Vienna)
  • 27. Steep Slopes of the Ischgl-Samnaun Ski Resort (Ischgl)
  • 28. Gaze Far from the Hallstatt Viewing Platform (Hallstatt)
  • 29. Kirche am Steinhof Church (Vienna)
  • 30. Hundertwasser House (Vienna)
  • 31. The Third Man Museum (Vienna)
  • 32. Kitzsteinhorn Ski Resort (Zell am See)
  • 33. Hallstatt Old Town (Hallstatt)
  • 34. Bergisel Ski Jumping Hill (Innsbruck)
  • 35. Hellbrunn Castle Trick Fountains (Salzburg)
  • 36. St. Anton Ski Base (St. Anton am Arlberg)
  • 37. Mozart’s Birthplace (Salzburg)
  • 38. Krimml Falls (Krimml)
  • 39. Stephansplatz (Vienna)
  • 40. Vienna by Night (Vienna)
  • 41. Swarovski Crystal Worlds (Wattens)
  • 42. Innsbruck Old Town (Innsbruck)
  • 43. Adrenaline Junkie Heaven at Red Bull Hangar 7 (Salzburg)
  • 44. Alpine Zoo (Innsbruck)
  • 45. Leopold Museum (Vienna)
  • 46. Imperial Treasury of Vienna (Vienna)
  • 47. Parliament Building (Vienna)
  • 48. Salt Mines (Hallstatt)
  • 49. Sisi Museum (Vienna)
  • 50. Naschmarkt Food Market (Vienna)
  • 51. Museum of Military History (Vienna)
  • 52. Hang out with the Dead at Central Cemetery (Vienna)
  • 53. Ride the Hungerburg Funicular (Innsbruck)
  • 54. Stubaier Gletscher Ski Resort (Neustift im Stubaital)
  • 55. Aqua Dome (Langenfeld)
  • 56. Monkey Business at Aqua Terra Zoo (Vienna)
  • 57. Hundertwasser Art Gallery Kunst Haus Wien (Vienna)
  • 58. Party at Volksgarten Disco Club (Vienna)
  • 59. Explore the Technical Museum (Vienna)
  • 60. To the Top of Rosshutte (Seefeld in Tirol)
  • 61. Psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud (Museum) (Vienna)
  • 62. Lake Achensee Cog Railway and Boat Cruise (Maurach)
  • 63. Mayrhofen Ski Resort (Mayrhofen)
  • 64. Dachstein Skywalk (Ramsau am Dachstein)
  • 65. Salt Mine Treasure Hunt (Hallein)
  • 66. Ski Arlberg (Lech)
  • 67. Liechtensteinklamm Gorge (Sankt Johann im Pongau)
  • 68. Zwolferhorn Cable Car (St. Gilgen)
  • 69. Schafberg Cog Railway (St. Wolfgang)
  • 70. Hexenwasser (Söll)
  • 71. Kaiser Villa (Bad Ischl)
  • 72. Sigmund-Thun-Klamm (Kaprun)
  • 73. Kuenringer Castle Climb (Durnstein)
  • 74. Schwaz Silver Mine (Schwaz)
  • 75. World’s Largest Ice Cave (Werfen)
  • 76. Zell am See Alpine Village Trip from Salzburg (Zell am See)
  • 77. The Butterfly House (Vienna)
  • 78. Madame Tussauds (Vienna)
  • 79. Zipline Stoderzinken (Gröbming)
  • 80. MAK Austrian Museum of Applied Arts (Vienna)
  • 81. Mauthausen Memorial (Linz)
  • 82. Lake Worthersee (Klagenfurt)
  • 83. The Vienna Philharmonic (Vienna)
  • 84. Alpine Coaster (Imst)
  • 85. Red Bull Ring (Spielberg)
  • 86. Designer Outlet (Parndorf)
  • 87. Lookout Tower Pyramidenkogel (Keutschach am See)
  • 88. Arnold Schwarzenegger Museum (Thal bei Graz)
  • 89. AREA 47 (Ötztal-Bahnhof)
  • 90. Mountaincart Ride (Mitterbach)
  • 91. Highline179 Suspension Bridge (Reutte)
  • 92. Esterhazy Palace Wine Tour (Eisenstadt)
  • 93. Family Land Adventure Park (St. Jakob in Haus)
  • 94. Bregenz Festival (Bregenz)
  • 95. Schladming Ski Resort (Schladming)
  • 96. Kufstein Fortress (Kufstein)
  • 97. Loacker Point of Sale (Heinfels)
  • 98. Black Lake (Kitzbuhel)
  • 99. Kaprun Dam (Kaprun)
  • 100. Strauss Monument (Vienna)

1. Schonbrunn Imperial Summer Palace (Vienna)

The palace and its magnificent gardens are famed for being the former imperial summer residence. With over 300 years of history of Habsburg monarchs, you can easily spend a whole day here. Private tours with expert guides that will share their knowledge of the palace with you are available, as well as an evening event including dinner and a concert.

2. Take a Walk through Vienna’s Historic Center (Vienna)

If you want to take a walk among some of the most beautiful architecture in the world, while well-groomed horses strut past you with their carriages, look no further. The historic centre of Vienna offers exactly that – but also much more. Segway you way around or hop right on a bus with the Vienna pass. The choice is yours.

3. Coffee and Cake in Salzburger Altstadt – Salzburg Old Town (Salzburg)

Old town city centres are simply the best. Magnificent architecture, delicious street food and shopping until you go broke. For the authentic Salzburg experience, take this 2-hour tour
and enjoy your coffee and cake.

4. Klimt in the Belvedere Palace Museum (Vienna)

Belvedere is a beautiful palace that is now home to stunning art collection. If you are a fan of Klimt, this is your chance to see the Kiss in person. But that is hardly all you can see there – prepare your cameras or you’ll forget half of it before you’re home. To learn about the history of the palace and fascinating details about the artworks, consider the 3-hour private tour of the palace and its exhibitions.

5. Kunsthistorisches Museum – Art History Museum (Vienna)

If you like art, this is a must-see. This one-of-a-kind museum features some of the greatest works of artists such as Rembrandt, Rubens, Tintoretto and others. To complement the great masters, you can also see Egyptian and Near East exhibitions, Ancient Greek and Roman collections as well as the coin cabinet.

6. Visit World’s Oldest Zoo (Vienna)

Are animals your thing? Do you want to see everything from the deadliest predators to the cuddliest little creatures? Well, they have it all covered at Vienna Zoo, which holds the title of oldest in the world. It houses over 700 animal species, some of them endangered. You can attend animal talks and feedings or take the panorama train.

7. A Walk through Schonbrunner Gardens (Vienna)

These gardens were built for kings and queens and even today, you will feel like one walking in them. They offer a myriad of entertaining things: a maze, a hill with a great view, many games…too much to be all seen in a day. Excellent for a romantic walk with your special someone.

8. Prater (Vienna)

Prater is the best known amusement park in Austria. One of the landmarks of Vienna, the big Ferris wheel, is located here, as well as the planetarium, the train ride and other things you will certainly enjoy. You can easily spend a whole day just here, trying out various attractions. The entrance is free, but you have to pay individual fees.

9. Hofburg Imperial Palace (Vienna)

If the day is cold and damp and the gardens don’t seem appealing, go inside the Hofburg Imperial Palace
for a similar, worthy-of-a-king experience. The many rooms with monarchy era furniture, paintings and dresses are sure to leave no one cold. For those of you with an interest in history and royalty, don’t miss this!

10. State Opera House (Vienna)

The State Opera House in Vienna is one of the centres of culture in Austria. You can go on a guided tour, but for the best experience, go and see one of the magnificent shows on display there. You can find an updated list, as well as early tickets, here. Just make sure to book in advance, they sell like hotcakes!

11. Grossglockner Alpine Road Drive (Heiligenblut)

Can you say spectacular views? Well, few are more spectacular than those you will see on the Grossglockner Alpine Road. The mountains are, of course, the stars, but the waterfalls, the flowers and the high alpine farmers all combine to make this idyllic piece of Earth what it is. Take this half-day trip from Salzburg and enjoy the view.

12. View of Vienna from St. Stephen’s Cathedral (Vienna)

St. Stephen’s Cathedral, or as the locals call it, Stephansdom, is a mix of Romanesque and Gothic architecture. The architecture and interior design are breath-taking, as can be the climb up to the tallest tower. But the 136 meter(446 ft) tall climb is worth the view of the city from above. Put this into your tour plan of Vienna

13. Dinner at Salzburg Fortress (Salzburg)

Have you ever wanted to have a fancy dinner in a real castle? Your chance is now, with this special two-for-one offer. First, you will be seated in a 900-year old hall inside the fortress, where you will be served delicious traditional meals. Then, the residential orchestra will perform the most famous Mozart’s pieces for the finale of the evening. Treat your loved one and bring him or her to this wonderful experience.

14. Christmas Market at City Hall Rathaus (Vienna)

If you are in Austria from the middle of November until Christmas, you have to see the market in front of Vienna City Hall. It is the largest in town, with hundreds of stands offering everything imaginable from local deserts to Christmas tree decorations to take home as a souvenir. And even if you come here at some other time, the Gothic architecture is still one of the best sights in Vienna.

15. Kitzbuhel Ski Resort (Kitzbuhel)

If you follow competitive skiing, you are familiar with this famous ski resort. Every year, the best in the world come here to compete on the “Streif”. Now you can, too. The resort is considered by many to be the best in the world and has received numerous awards. If you are coming to Austria for skiing, this is your number one choice.

16. Sound of Music Tour at Mirabell Palace & Gardens (Salzburg)

This tourist gem is placed in the heart of Salzburg. “Sound of Music” was filmed there and on other locations nearby, all of which are included in the 4-hour adventure-filled tour. See the iconic scenes from the movie and relive the classic moments. Watching the movie the night before is definitely recommended!

17. Cable Car Trip in the Alps to Innsbrucker Nordkette (Innsbruck)

This Alpine trip will take you from Innsbruck to the top of the 2256 meter tall Hafelekar peak. Along the way, you will see astonishing views of the city and the Alps. Make sure to stop at all the stations, especially at the Alpine Zoo – a favorite among families – along the way. The car ride takes 20 minutes, but the whole tour takes at least an hour, depending how much time you want to spend exploring.

18. Albertina (Vienna)

Albertina is both the largest Habsburg residential palace and houses the largest graphical collections in the world. Work such as Klimt’s studies of women and Dürer’s Hare can all be seen inside. The permanent exhibitions as well as temporary ones, like the popular “Monet to Picasso”, are well worth checking out. And did I mention the dining? Oh yes, guests are taken care of with fine dining right next door at Augustinerkeller.

19. Natural History Museum (Vienna)

From dinosaurs to galaxies, the Natural History Museum of Vienna has it all. With forty permanent and regular special exhibitions, it is one of the best natural history museums in the world. Budget more time than you think you need too, because if you want to see everything, you will be glad you did. Also don’t forget to go to the digital planetarium. You can get tickets for both online here.

20. Overview of Vienna on the Ringstrasse (Vienna)

The Ringstrasse is a circular road that goes all around Vienna past all the most popular tourist attractions. It is perfect for a quick overview of the city or if you are in Vienna only for a day. But that would mean missing seeing so many things from up close and having a deeper experience that you can get if you stay here for more than a day. Still, if you’re only here for a short time and want to quickly get some selfies, take advantage of this opportunity!

21. Knowledge at Melk Abbey (Melk)

Melk Abbey became famous for its library, which houses a vast collection of medieval scriptures and is one of the most known ones in Europe. From November to March, visits are only possible with a guided tour, so keep that in mind if you plan on coming in that time.

22. Nationalbibliothek – National Library (Vienna)

The Austrian National Library is not a must see only for its books, but also for the beautiful interior(one of the best in Vienna) and four museums
inside it. The amount of knowledge gathered there might just inspire you to become the next great inventor.

23. Untersberg (Salzburg)

If you long for a breathtaking view, this is it. From the town, you can take aa href=”http://www.salzburg.info/en/sights/excursions/cable_car_untersberg”>cable car< to the top of the mountain – the very one featured in the movie Sound of Music. On a sunny day, you will see for miles – the steep hills, the foggy mists, the vast forests. Enjoy and thank me later.

24. Classical Concert at St. Peter’s Church (Vienna)

St. Peter’s church is a hidden church in the centre of Vienna. If you don’t know it’s there, you will likely miss is as the view is obscured by surrounding buildings. However, that does not mean it is not worth visiting. In fact, they put on one of the best classical concerts in Vienna
– in a very special atmosphere.

25. Salzburg Cathedral (Salzburg)

Another must see for all Sound of Music fans. This cathedral was one of the shooting scenes for the famous film and it will astonish you with the beautiful paintings inside. If you want to hear the sound of the organs, come in during a sermon- even if you aren’t religious. See the beautiful Salzburg Cathedral and enjoy.

26. Museums Galore at Museumsquartier (Vienna)

Museumsquartier, or the Museum Square, is the eighth largest cultural area in the world. You can easily spend a whole day here, wandering around and exploring all the varied exhibitions, from classical to modern art. You can buy a tickets
, or you can opt for a more subtle experience with a private tour.

27. Steep Slopes of the Ischgl-Samnaun Ski Resort (Ischgl)

Do you dream of fast slopes? Fresh powder? Then book a ticket to this ski resort ASAP. But Ischgl-Samnaun Resort
offers so much more than just skiing – you get almost every adrenalin related activity you could want plus supreme lodgings and food. What’s not to like?

28. Gaze Far from the Hallstatt Viewing Platform (Hallstatt)

From the still lake of Hallstatt, climb to the highest peak around and enjoy the view. The mountains and the lake make it a picture worth of painting. If you’re in Salzburg, hop on this World Heritage VIew and imagine you are flying.

29. Kirche am Steinhof Church (Vienna)

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Off the beaten path lies a gem that is a must see for all art lovers. Built on the foundations of an old psychiatric hospital, it offers an atmosphere like no other. History and WW2 geeks should make sure to check the exhibition of the History of Naci-Medicine. You can also take a short one hour tour.

30. Hundertwasser House (Vienna)

The famous and crazy architect Hundertwasser built buildings that stand out. Among the rectangular shapes of the inner city, the wavy forms of the Hundertwasser House stand in pleasant contrast. A unique experience and a must see.

31. The Third Man Museum (Vienna)

Interested in post-war Vienna and movie history? If so, The Third Man Museum should be on your to-do Vienna list. The theme is not just the well known 1949 film, but the situation in Europe after World War 2. Something all history and film fanatics should see. Guided tours are available.

32. Kitzsteinhorn Ski Resort (Zell am See)

Another fine Austrian ski resort can be found in Zell am See. Skiing, freeride park, hiking, mountain biking, excellent cuisine and the first rate service all combine to create the perfect winter paradise.Kitzsteinhorn Ski Resort is one of the best not only in Austria, but in Europe. And if you like steep slopes – how does the over 60 degree angled Black Mamba sound to you?

33. Hallstatt Old Town (Hallstatt)

Hallstatt is a beautiful little town on the shore of Lake Hallstatt. It is famous for three things: salt production, giving the name to the Hallstatt historic period and being unbelievably charming. Only a short trip from Salzburg, this is one of the place you have to see in Austria and a day trip worth taking. Scuba diving is also a very popular activity on the lake.

34. Bergisel Ski Jumping Hill (Innsbruck)

If you are at all interesting in ski jumping – and even if you’re not – you owe it to yourself to stand atop the in-run at least once. It is a lot steeper than you’d imagine it from the TV and if you don’t have a head for heights, consider not going. But for everyone else, tickets can be bought here. Take a day off in Innsbruck and include this in your list.

35. Hellbrunn Castle Trick Fountains (Salzburg)

This baroque style palace is most known for its green gardens, which are full of ponds, trees and fountains. These fountains in particular are something you ought to watch out for: they make quite the show. Bring your loved one(s), they are sure to enjoy it!

36. St. Anton Ski Base (St. Anton am Arlberg)

Great skiing, excellent slopes and a city with many bars for visitors. Skier’s paradise? St. Anton Ski Base is also perhaps the place to go for apres ski in Austria. A great resort for more experienced skiers.

37. Mozart’s Birthplace (Salzburg)

Who hasn’t heard of Mozart? After all, he is the second most legendary composer – perhaps only after Beethoven(but most people only know the dog). If your plan of travel involves Salzburg, take an hour of your time and budget it here. The house now contains a themed museum where you can see where and how the Mozart family lived and learn about his childhood.

38. Krimml Falls (Krimml)

Without a doubt, Krimml Falls are the most beautiful in Austria. Only a short drive from Salzburg, you can see the 380 meter fall. It falls on three levels, each more spectacular than the last. It takes about an hour and a half to get to the view at the top. If you get tired, there is restaurant along the way to one of the most beautiful natural attractions in Austria.

39. Stephansplatz (Vienna)

Is it sunny and you are yearning for a walk to get some fresh air? Kill two birds with one stone and come to Stephansplatz. Ideal for walking and shopping, this is an area you can explore for days and not get tired of it. If there’s any place that can be called The Heart of Vienna, this is it.

40. Vienna by Night (Vienna)

Ready to see Vienna by night? This unique tour takes you around the Ring Road, where you get to see the city and learn about its history. It includes a ride on the city’s ferris wheel and at the end, a glass of wine in Grinzing ‘heurige’ – a traditional Austrian tavern.

41. Swarovski Crystal Worlds (Wattens)

The Swarovski Crystal Worlds is a park that was created on the centennial anniversary of the company. On the outside, it looks like a green park with lots of points of interest – like the Giant. There’s also the play tower, the playground and the labyrinth. Inside, you can see a great collection of crystals on exhibit. If bling is your thing, go and see the Swarovski Crystal Worlds for yourself.

42. Innsbruck Old Town (Innsbruck)

All old towns have their charm and each one is unique in its own way. The Innsbruck Old Town centre is small, but jam-packed with historical buildings, cafes and food stands. It is equally, but differently beautiful in summer and in winter, but the time around Christmas adds even more to its usual charm. Make sure to check out the Golden Roof, made out of 2,738 gold-plated copper tiles.

43. Adrenaline Junkie Heaven at Red Bull Hangar 7 (Salzburg)

Do you like fast cars? Airplane acrobatics? Jumps from the edge of space? Then you have to go Red Bull Hangar 7. The collection there is simply something any adrenaline junkie would give his left hand to have. F1 race cars, NASCAR, the capsule Felix Baumgartner used in his historic jump, and much more. Hm, I might go there right now.

44. Alpine Zoo (Innsbruck)

Mountain animals are a sight to see, especially from up close. You can get the chance to do so in the Alpine Zoo Innsbruck. Bears, wolves, bison, eagles…on and on, you’ll need at least an hour to see everything. A great trip for families.

45. Leopold Museum (Vienna)

Art gallery par excellence. Found in the museum quarter of Vienna, it houses vast collections of artists like Klimt, Schiele and many others. Unlike some other museums, you are allowed to take pictures. Get your tickets here.

46. Imperial Treasury of Vienna (Vienna)

This is the most important treasury in the world for a reason. It served as the treasury of the Habsburg family, one of the richest dynasties in the history of the world. Inside, you will find the crowns of the Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and the Emperor of Austria, treasures and a unicorn. Yes, I’m not joking.

47. Parliament Building (Vienna)

One of the landmarks of Vienna, the locally known “Das Parlament” is where the two houses conduct their sessions. From up close, it is enormous – too big to take it all in a picture. It is one of those places you have to see for yourself in real life to truly experience the size. If you miss it by day, come at night and see it bask in the glow of the lights. If you are interested in what goes on inside, take a guided tour.

48. Salt Mines (Hallstatt)

Learn about the salt mines and trade in this tour of the old mine of Hallstatt. You will be taken on a panorama tour with a funicular railway into tunnels, some which are 3000 years old and were dug by hand. And the best thing is the slide at the end of the tour! Unfortunately, it is closed in winter, so put this on your summer visit plans.

49. Sisi Museum (Vienna)

Empress Sisi was a very interesting person. She maintained a rigorous exercise regime, rode for hours every day and took care of her beauty with cult-like devotion. However, even all of that and all the riches in the world didn’t always make her happy. Learn more about her in this one-of-a-kind museum.

50. Naschmarkt Food Market (Vienna)

If you are staying in Vienna for more than just a day and maybe plan to do some cooking – or even if not – you have to check Naschmarkt out. And if you don’t have time to buy fresh ingredients to cook, just go into one of the many restaurants nearby. The prices of food are reasonable, as this is a local market for locals, not a tourist attraction primarily. You can book a tour around the market here.

51. Museum of Military History (Vienna)

If you are interested in history, particularly the history of European warfare, the Museum of Military History in Vienna is the place to go to. Covering everything between the Thirty Years War and the fall of the Habsburg empire that came with WW1, it houses 13 permanent exhibitions. The guided tours take between an hour to two hours – you can choose a general tour or a tour of any of the permanent exhibitions on its own.

52. Hang out with the Dead at Central Cemetery (Vienna)

Cemeteries are a divide for tourists. Some love them, some can’t stand to go to one. But there’s no denying that they have an energy about them. If you are fond of exploring tombstones of famous people and unknowns alike, set aside a few hours for a visit to the Central Cemetery of Vienna(I suggest going on the last day of your stay).

53. Ride the Hungerburg Funicular (Innsbruck)

If you want great views, you have to go high. That is exactly where the Hungerburg Funicular will take you. If you are in Innsbruck, don’t miss it – the views are nothing short of spectacular and on a sunny day, this will be an experience you will never forget.

54. Stubaier Gletscher Ski Resort (Neustift im Stubaital)

This glacier is the perfect place for all levels of skiers. Due to the high altitude, you can always expect snow and powder. However, remoteness does not mean a lack of “civilization” – you’ll have everything you would have at home (and possibly more).

55. Aqua Dome (Langenfeld)

How does a day spent in a hot pool surrounded by freshly fallen snow sound like? If that sounds like cup of proverbial tea, the Aqua Dome Thermal Pools will be worth of a trip. With many outside and inside pools and all kinds of saunas, you will be able to relax completely and let yourself be pampered all day long.

56. Monkey Business at Aqua Terra Zoo (Vienna)

Who would guess that inside a World War 2 flak tower there would be an aquarium and a zoo in hiding? The choice of space proves to be excellent, as is the zoo itself. A must see if you are travelling with children. If you love animals, you will spend at least a few hours here. Just beware of the monkeys – they are terribly playful!

57. Hundertwasser Art Gallery Kunst Haus Wien (Vienna)

When you go to Vienna, you simply can’t be allowed to miss out on Hundertwasser. If you haven’t heard the name before, he was one of the most influential artists and architects of the 20th century. In this gallery, you will have the opportunity to see his greatest pieces. A must for art lovers.

58. Party at Volksgarten Disco Club (Vienna)

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“Volksgarten” means the People’s Garden. But when locals say they are going to the “Volksgarten”, they don’t mean the actual garden – they mean the disco club inside it. It is one of the top spots for a party in Vienna and it charms with its 1950’s style furniture. It is telling that in the fast-moving party world, the Volksgarten Disco Clubhas remained a hot spot for decades.

59. Explore the Technical Museum (Vienna)

If you like technology, you will undoubtedly enjoy your visit to the Technical Museum of Vienna. With a myriad of exhibits spread over 22,000 square meters, you will have enough to do to fill a rainy afternoon – or day. Especially good for families with children.

60. To the Top of Rosshutte (Seefeld in Tirol)

RosshutteRosshutte is a small ski resort in the Tirol alps. The only way for non-skiers to get to the top there – and subsequently get to enjoy the amazing views – is the cable car. The resort itself is also worth a visit; it has slopes for all levels of skiing. If you are not visiting for the snow, just go to the top and snap a picture.

61. Psychoanalysis with Sigmund Freud (Museum) (Vienna)

The mind is like an iceberg. So is this museum: meaning that it is large and cold on the inside. No, just kidding. But it is a place worth visiting. Freud was one of the foremost thinkers in the history and this is the best chance to learn more about him. The Sigmund Freud Museum also offers guided tours.

62. Lake Achensee Cog Railway and Boat Cruise (Maurach)

Lake Achensee is one of the biggest lakes in Austria and one of the most beautiful as well. It has a long history of tourism and the trip there is special because of the cog railway from 1889, on which you can ride today still. After that, go on a relaxing cruise on the lake.

63. Mayrhofen Ski Resort (Mayrhofen)

Austria is full of ski resort and so is this list. However, each one deserves its spot in the top 100. Mayrhofen Ski Resort is no different; in fact, it is special. No only can you ski on the amazing slopes, you can also go hiking, paragliding, or visit the many bars and restaurants in the area. The choice is yours.

64. Dachstein Skywalk (Ramsau am Dachstein)

Ever wanted to walk in the sky? In Dachstein, you can do just that. The views from the Suspension Bridge, the Skywalk and the Stairway to Nothingness are as amazing as the names suggest. The panorama gondola and the Ice Palace complete the glacier experience.

65. Salt Mine Treasure Hunt (Hallein)

In Hallein, salt has been described as “white gold” since 2500 years ago, when the Celts first began to mine this precious treasure. Today, you can go on a two-hour adventure of discovering the underground world. In the Hallein Salt Mine, you will go down a salt slide, raft on an underground lake and travel through the mine on a pit railway. A great adventure near Salzburg.

66. Ski Arlberg (Lech)

Lech is still one of the best ski places in the world. Unlike some other resorts on the list, I wouldn’t recommend this one to beginners, as the pistes are more difficult. But if you like a challenge, Ski Arlberg might be the destination for you.

67. Liechtensteinklamm Gorge (Sankt Johann im Pongau)

This spectacular gorge is one of the deepest and longest in the alpine world of Austria. The Liechtenstein Gorge will charm you with its moss-covered stones and beautiful waterfalls. Perfect for a day trip with your family.

68. Zwolferhorn Cable Car (St. Gilgen)

Take me to the top of the world! In this cable car ride to Zwolferhorn, you will indeed go there – or as close as possible in these mountains. There is very nice restaurant at the top as well. Recommended on a sunny day, otherwise you will miss the best part

69. Schafberg Cog Railway (St. Wolfgang)

The Schafberg Cog Railway will take you straight to the top of Mount Schafberg in a 35 minute trip. It is the steepest railway in Austria, so think twice if you are scared of heights. Again, highly recommended on a sunny day, as there won’t be much to see otherwise. But on a nice day, the views are spectacular.

70. Hexenwasser (Söll)

What does the perfect playground for children look like? In my opinion, it includes witches and water. And guess what: that is exactly what you get at Hexenwasser. It is a huge park with tons of interactive activities for children that are both fun and educational. A unique experience for families.

71. Kaiser Villa (Bad Ischl)

The Kaiser Villa used to be the summer residence of the Habsburg imperial family. It is the place where the last emperor lived and it is rich with history. The castle grounds are a beautiful garden and you get the chance to learn about how the Kaiser lived. A cool history trip.

72. Sigmund-Thun-Klamm (Kaprun)

If you aren’t afraid to get wet and are close to Kaprun, go to the Sigmund-Thun-Klamm. It is a waterfall accessible via a timber staircase along the side of a natural canyon. It is a great short(half-day with the drive there) hiking trek that ends at a nice like with a picnic place.

73. Kuenringer Castle Climb (Durnstein)

If you’d like to do some walking and see grand castle ruins at the end, Durnstein is the place for you. The old ruins were one of the places where Richard I of England was imprisoned. Today, it is a hiking destination, as you are sure to build up a sweat and enjoy the view at the top.

74. Schwaz Silver Mine (Schwaz)

One of the largest silver mines in the Middle Ages, the Schwaz Silver Mine is a popular tourist destination. No wonder – the 90 minute tour takes you deep underground on a wondrous trip through the history of silver mining and the mine itself. Wunderbar!

75. World’s Largest Ice Cave (Werfen)

Set your foot inside the largest ice cave in the world. A short drive from Salzburg, the icy and mysterious caves await the adventurous traveller. On this private tour, you will experience stunning views; not only inside, but on the approach as well. An experience you won’t soon forget. Remember to wear warm clothes!

76. Zell am See Alpine Village Trip from Salzburg (Zell am See)

Do you wish to escape the city life and enjoy the peace and tranquility of the high country? Then the destination for you is Zell am See, an alpine village an hour’s drive from Salzburg. The food, the people and the fresh mountain air will fill you batteries so you can go back to the “real world” ready and energized.

77. The Butterfly House (Vienna)

You’ve been to a zoo, but have you been to a butterfly zoo? Probably not – however, you should consider going. With over 400 species that can be seen year round, the Butterfly House is sure to charm even the grumpiest tourist. And if you are looking for unique wedding ideas, they also offer them here.

78. Madame Tussauds (Vienna)

The world famous Madame Tussauds can also be found in Vienna. Of course, the exhibits are Austrian-themed, with wax sculptures of Sisi, Emperor Joseph, Hundertwasser and other famous Austrians. But fans of pop culture need not worry, you will also get the usual cream-of-the-crop Hollywood and sports stars.

79. Zipline Stoderzinken (Gröbming)

Zipline over the Styrian landscapes like and eagle and see the world below from a bird’s eye view. As you speed above the forests, you will be treated to sights that you’ll need a GoPro to capture (because you might forget it due to the adrenaline that will be coursing through your veins. The Stoderzinken’s speciality is multiple ziplines right next to each other, which makes this a perfect experience with friends or family.

80. MAK Austrian Museum of Applied Arts (Vienna)

If you are into alternative art, you will find hours of excitement in MAK. The Museum of Applied Arts (or Contemporary Arts) houses many interesting exhibitions, from the Far East to the Biedermeier Period. Not only that, it holds regular events, workshops and art education classes. Make sure to check for those before you go on their website!

81. Mauthausen Memorial (Linz)

The Mauthausen Memorial is a memorial to one of the greatest horrors in modern history – the holocaust. It is a topic that is still taboo to talk about in Germany and Austria. However, it is a part of history we must not forget in order to prevent it from happening again. The day trip tour takes you from Vienna to the Mauthausen concentration camp.

82. Lake Worthersee (Klagenfurt)

Moving on to a lighter topic – the top tourist attraction in the summertime, Lake Worthersee. It has been the main retreat of Austrian aristocracy since the 19th century and it still retains the glamour today. It is one of the warmest lakes, which makes it perfect for swimming and other water-related activities.

83. The Vienna Philharmonic (Vienna)

http://snappygoat.com/o/eba66e70a1356275bf404f108af2832d64602f2c/The_Secretary_Walks_by_the_Wiener_Musikverein%2C_Home_to_the_Vienna_Philharmonic_Orchestra.jpg

One should go listen to the classic composers at least once when he is in Vienna. The local Philharmonic is perhaps the best place to do so. With frequent concerts year round, one only has to book a week or so in advance to secure themselves a ticket. Then, just sit back, relax and enjoy the sounds of the strings.

84. Alpine Coaster (Imst)

Are you a thrill seeker? An adrenaline junkie that can never get enough? Well, the Imst Alpine Coaster will surely leave you buzzing with endorphins for the rest of the day. The ride is 3,535 meters long and reaches break neck speeds. However, that isn’t even the beginning. Did I mention the 6 meter drops? Woooooooohooooooooooooo!

85. Red Bull Ring (Spielberg)

More for adrenaline fans: the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg. The place of MotoGP and Formula 1 races and the place for speed addicts in Austria. Race around the legendary Spielberg in a Formula 2 car and quench your need for speed.

86. Designer Outlet (Parndorf)

http://snappygoat.com/o/f1467203a1e13ece9796efb1974ffd0592312c5c/Parndorf%20Designer%20Outlet%20(1).jpg

Is shopping more your thing? If you wish to splurge on the best designer pieces at great prices, Parndorf Designer Outlet has you covered. With shops of premium brands like Tommy Hilfiger, Ralph Lauren, Gucci and many others, you can stay here all day. Just remember to set a limit on how much you are willing to spend!

87. Lookout Tower Pyramidenkogel (Keutschach am See)

Where can you see three countries from one place? High in the sky, obviously. However, there is a way to do that without even getting on a plane. Enter the Pyramidenkogel Lookout Tower. You have to walk to get to the top, but the way down is much faster – because you will be going down a slide. Another thing – it is made out of wood (but is is still completely safe).

88. Arnold Schwarzenegger Museum (Thal bei Graz)

“I’ll be back! Get to the chopper! It’s not a tumor!” are all phrases that will stay with fans of action(and some not so action) films forever. The Arnold Schwarzenegger Museum in his hometown is indeed the place to learn about the humble beginnings of the man who accomplished everything he set out to do.

89. AREA 47 (Ötztal-Bahnhof)

For the young or body or heart, children, youngsters and adults alike,AREA 47 offers an adrenaline-filled experience that you will remember. Whether you come with friends or family, the biggest outdoor park in Austria has something for you. Make sure to book before you go, as the park is often fully sold out.

90. Mountaincart Ride (Mitterbach)

Mountain carts are like gokarts, but on a mountain road. And the rides are three-wheel bikes that look like tuned Harley Davidson’s. 5 kilometers of track (German only, use Google Translate) will keep your adrenaline pumping. How fast can you make it to the bottom?

91. Highline179 Suspension Bridge (Reutte)

Not for the faint hearted! At a height of 114 meters and a length of 406, the Highline179is sure to take your breath – and that is even before you step on it. The view is amazing, whether you look around or down. However, don’t be afraid: the bridge is well secured and can hold 500 people at once.

92. Esterhazy Palace Wine Tour (Eisenstadt)

By now, you might be a bit sick of castles. You’ve probably seen enough of them to think that they’re all the same anyway. However, the Esterhazy Palace offers the largest wine museum in Austria. The tour is self-guided; we are not sure if that means one will be left unsupervised with the wine barrels. Hmm…

93. Family Land Adventure Park (St. Jakob in Haus)

Fun for the whole family! This adventure park(use Google Translate) will leave no soul young at heart unsatisfied. Hour of fun play wait for you here. Definitely worthy of a day trip. If you are in Kitzbuhel, it’s only a short drive away.

94. Bregenz Festival (Bregenz)

From July to August, the edge of Lake Constance(Bodensee) is taken over by the Bregenz Festival. In 2017, it will feature plays like Moses in Egypt, operas like To the Lighthouse, concerts, recitals and more. Here is everything you need to know about the festival.

95. Schladming Ski Resort (Schladming)

Another ski resort, you say? Yes – and no. Of course, Schladming Ski Resort is a snow paradise. But the town also has plenty of things to do; you can go on a Christmas horse-drawn sleigh ride, or dine in one of the local restaurants.

96. Kufstein Fortress (Kufstein)

Kufstein Fortress is a place of history. It was mainly used as a prison and you can learn about its history. You have the choice between walking or a funicular to get to the top. The view is nice and spectacular at sunset. Organ concert at midday is not be missed!

97. Loacker Point of Sale (Heinfels)

If you are a fan of Loacker products, I don’t need to tell you to go here. For everyone else, Loacker produces some of the most delicious sweets – wafers, choco bars, praline… If you have a sweet tooth, you will enjoy your time here.

98. Black Lake (Kitzbuhel)

If you are spending your vacation in Kitzbuhel and need a break from all the skiing, take a day off and walk around the Black Lake. It is frozen in the winter and you can even walk on it(be careful of thin ice). In the summer, you can swim in it or sunbathe on the beach. Lovely.

99. Kaprun Dam (Kaprun)

Whether you would like to throw a basketball to test the Magnus effect or just enjoy the view, the Kaprun Dam offers what you want. A tour takes you inside the huge structure, where you will learn about clean electricity and sustainability.

100. Strauss Monument (Vienna)

We end where we started – in the heart of Austria – Vienna, with the statue of Johann Strauss, one of the famous classical composers. Bring an IPod so you can listen to a tune while you stroll around and imagine what it must have been like to be a rock star in those days.

CategoriesBest Things To Do InTravelPost navigation

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10 thoughts on “100 Best Things to do in Austria”

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Ashok Tyagi

00002. 

May 16, 2017 at 6:01 am Reply

00003. 

Great information Jacky Miller. Greetings from ICMEI.

00004. 

00005. 

Ajay kumar

00006. 

August 13, 2018 at 6:48 am Reply

00007. 

Really thanks for sharing this useful post !! Austria is a nice place to visit for holidays and I will definitely do all these things with my friends.

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Most Extremely Important Interview With Glen Kealey and Desert Owl


GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.6

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTyM4EnIiF4

Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on Mar 20, 2009

Enough Blame 2 Go Around~! The people are broken. Priests abuse sexually, Lawyers abuse mentally, Doctors abuse physically and Politicians abuse financially. Bureaucrats are the enablers while Police are the enforcers. Is it any wonder why the people are broken?

 


"Who was GLEN KEALEY?" - Conversation With Glen Kealey

Conversation With Glen Kealey

https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/pumpitout/conversation-with-glen-kealey-t2126-s10.html

Jan 14, 2009 

Jeff,

What was your impression of Kealey talking with him for an hour?

I think some of what he said was very interesting to say the least, but he got a little too far out there for me near the end.

 

Jan 14, 2009

That was my impression, the neanderthal stuff was too much for me, but never the less interesting. I've only been looking into this stuff for a few years. After looking for 20 years like he has, who knows what I would believe.

 

 Feb 02, 2009

 

From Glean Kealey;

wrote:ANSWER TO QUESTION(S) 

#1 Alan has his place in the scheme of things. As with most Scots (fabricated by the Irish and French) he's a quarrier, a ground level Gaza strip miner, when the price of OYL is right. 

#2 No seminar/workshop can teach 58,800 years of A men / E men and Ra men. What I try to pass on to a select few who can handle IT is the premise of the age we live in....POLARIS. True learning comes from living it--to observe, analyze and conclude-- through sima/sial osmosis and isostasy equilibrium. 

#3 I am currently helping a small group of approx. 50 security people by means of osmosis daily (self-styled The Cell) on a different network which they call "the Cat Mobile" 

Bing, Being, Boeing, Beijing, Bang

The SculPTor (1776-1867) WWW.WORDSCULPTOR.NET aka WWW.KEALEY.NET Web Site of Glen Kealey, National PresidentCanadian Institute for Political Integrity (CIPI) 
http://kealeyne.ipower.com 
http://www.wordsculptor.net/web/previou ... ndex4.html 

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February 2, 2009



Who was GLEN KEALEY?"? 

From: Glen Kealey (glen.kealey@sympatico.ca
Sent: June 3, 2008 2:32:05 AM 
Reply-to: glen.kealey@sympatico.ca 
To: kim_campbell@ksg.harvard.edu 
Cc: DoyleK@ottawapolice.ca

"Who was GLEN KEALEY?"

Most everyone I meet today still ask me about how it was that I managed 
to have the three top Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioners 
charged with corruption by an Ottawa court in 1991, and what happened to 
them and to the four Senators, the four Cabinet ministers and former 
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Chief of Staff
who were all charged, as a team, with "conspiring to commit fraud upon 
the Canadian people.

The following is a synopsis of how I came to be involved and my 20-year 
investigation that followed.

Business Bio

In 1959 I began a 14 year career with Gestetner Canada, a British firm 
which manufactured and sold duplicating / copying equipment worldwide. 
After spending time on service and customer relations in Toronto, I was 
promoted to sales and then sales management, in Montreal and Ottawa.

I left Gestetner in 1973 to open a company of my own called Safari 
Office Products and operated it for a
year and a half. Lacking challenge doing this I had stints managing the 
sale of printing and typesetting
equipment and then ran a couple of photocopy centre operations of which 
I was part owner. It was in one of
these businesses that "I" conceived the Micot project, a $160 million 
"Intelligent Building Complex". This
was in 1981, long before the advent of the Internet.

I put together a fund-raising program that brought forth the interest of 
bridge financing partners.

Together we then raised a firm commitment for MICOT's the balance of the 
$160 million construction cost (from blue chip pension funds), for the 
Hotel/Office/Showroom/Convention/Retail/Education "city-within-a-city" 
to be constructed on a 200,000 sq. ft. site directly across the Ottawa 
river north of Parliament Hill.

MICOT project would enclose 1.5 million square feet of "intelligent 
space" (pre-wired on a ten foot grid for computers and communications) 
and the two bracketing office/hotel towers which would rise 24 stories.

After acquiring the land from the Hull school board and building a 
replacement school worth $3.6 million, the
MICOT project (Manager's Institute of Communicating Office Technologies) 
was finally ready to proceed to its construction phase.

In 1986, letters of Intent suggested that the project would be fully 
rented prior to opening day (3 years for
construction) and that my remaining shares would then be worth $23 
million; with further projected personal income amounting to more than 
$1 million annually.

This is when I was approached by the Mulroney Tory government (by Roch 
LaSalle, the then Canadian Minister of Public Works) who requested that 
I pay the Tories 5% of the cost of the project ($8 million), plus a 
$5,000 messenger fee for himself personally.

I refused outright, and subsequently the Trojan Tories assisted by the 
"opposition" Liberals, both subjet to their secret insider Masonic 
contacts, took actions that then prevented the confirmed financing from 
going ahead. My financial partners then transferred ownership of our 
construction site to Bell Canada.

That is when I realised that I, in fact, must have lied to my four 
children, as had my own care-givers lied to
me, when I had led them to believe that, in Canada, we live in "a 
democratic country ruled by law". I had by then overstood that, to the 
contrary, we in fact live in "a fascist country ruled by criminals".

I then vowed publicly that sometime before I died, I would get to the 
bottom of this new overstanding.

To make a long story shorter let me just state that the Minister of 
Public Works's secretary had contacted me at my office and asked me to 
meet with DPW minister LaSalle, at Nate's Restaurant, in Ottawa, 
supposedly for breakfast.

Once there however, LaSalle stated to me ..."the time has come for the 
Government to help your project ...and that will take some money." After 
a brief sales pitch made to me by LaSalle, on how lucky I was to be 
dealing directly with him as opposed to dealing through a third party, 
and with emphasis being placed on the fact that help would come my way 
as soon as I paid him his up-front courier fee of $5000 in cash (known 
in sales as "closing on a minor point"), he sat back and waited for my 
response.

When I blurted "no way", stating that I would never pay a bribe. I then 
also reminded him that our project was
not a government project; that it was "private sector" in its function, 
and also, that immediately it would create 5,000 jobs for which he could 
take credit.

LaSalle laughed and restated "when you're ready for
your project to go ahead, call my secretary and bring the money to our 
next meeting". (Later, I offered, took, and passed a 3.5-hour polygraph 
test administered to me by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police; a wide 
ranging test based on the events beyond that which had transpired at 
this Nate's restaurant meeting).

I then proceeded to my office where, by phone to Montreal, I informed my 
two partners; the financier
and the architect. Both suggested that I might have been a little rash 
in turning him down (as my own
business experience was in technology and printing; theirs was in the 
construction industry of which I
knew nothing).

No matter, I was the President of the project and, as a result of our 
"Unanimous Shareholders Agreement", my partners could not act against my 
wishes without breaching our contract.

Later, they tried to steal control of the project away from me, but lost 
in the courts; however the resulting bad publicity reportedly caused the 
project to "die in the egg" before its construction. Hence, they did 
make a large profit on the sale of the land to Bell Canada.

When this bribe request had occurred I had first put it down to the 
actions of a lone crook...one who happened to be in political office. 
Yet, after completing my investigation of all the facts surrounding the 
request for a bribe (5 years), I was able to present all of the evidence 
confirming the existence of a vast criminal conspiracy which I had 
compiled, to a criminal court in Ottawa.

The court agreed with me that the problem was systemic and criminal.

Immediately warrants were issued by the Justice for 16 people, 
including: a) the top 3 Commissioners of the Royal Canadian Mounted 
Police (ceasing and limiting police investigations of a political 
nature); b) the Prime Minister's Chief of Staff; c) 4 Top Senators; d) 4 
Cabinet Ministers (called Secretaries in the USA) and
other backroom flunkies, (all for "Fraud upon the Government").

None-the-less, once backroom Masons in Canada's Just-us Department got 
involved, only 1 Senator was eventually
sent to trial (Senator Cogger was eventually found guilty), while the 
rest scattered like the rats they were, on former Prime Minister Brian 
Mulroney's sinking political battleship.

Most of the corrupt cops then retired and went to work as auditors, 
either for banks or accounting firms (a la Arthur Andersen).

My first suspicion that Ecclesiastic Freemasonry was involved came to me 
as a result of an interview I did
with the National Editor of the Toronto Globe and Mail, Paul Polango, in 
my home-office, in 1991.

Specifically, his interest in the role that Freemasonry had played, or 
not played in my investigation which had led to criminal charges of 
"ceasing and limiting police investigations" laid by the court in Ottawa 
against the top three Commissioners of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police 
sparked my interest in backroom Masons.

Later, following my first sleep-over at the home of the then Globe 
reporter Stevie (Stephanie) Cameron, a stay
done at her invitation supposedly in order to fill her in on my 
knowledge of corruption during the Mulroney years, I was intrigued by 
the role that her husband, David, had played in writing the 
unconstitutional Meech Lake Accord, reportedly on behalf of the same 
gang of politicians that Stevie was, purportedly, now investigating.

As well, Stevie's holidays in a villa in the south of France had also 
piqued my curiosity.

Finally, the contacts that I had made during my years in business and 
subsequently, my faxing campaign to the then 91 Embassies in Ottawa 
during the Gustafson Lake native/Privy Council/ Rockefeller/media 
standoff in British Columbia, helped me to further overstand the 
"missing links" in my ongoing research into The Grand Canal massive 
water diversion project, and of former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's 
timely employment by the world's first food cartel led by Archer Daniels 
Midland (ADM).

ADM is the original spelling of the name Adam. It is one of Ecclesiastic 
Freemasonry's main code words, along with the word "dyke"; meaning 
"containing the flow and diverting" from the original.

As a result of all of the evidence discerned from the above, 
Ecclesiastic Freemasonry's "tollgators and pirates" became the prime 
suspects in what I saw as a worldwide POLO conspiracy.

Furthermore, my direct personal contacts with a Member of the 
Legislative Assembly of Quebec, Minister Gilles Rocheleau, the former 
mayor of Hull, Quebec where I lived, who had been appointed the Minister 
for Public Security for the Province of Quebec. He had helped me better 
overstand the links that exist between English Freemasonry and the 
French Jacobins.

When alive, Rocheleau's restaurant in Hull (across the river from Ottawa 
and near my project) was called Le Bocage, which phonetically converts 
to Jacob when read backwards. This name Jacob, I discovered, conforms to 
the rules or principles of coding and decoding used by H-P 
(Hindu-Persian) Zoroastrian Freemasonry.

The rest of the investigation was all reader-analyst type "police work" 
on my part.

As a result of my now 20 year investigation I have no problem believing 
that all politicians and all political parties are in fact lowly 
"Cosmetic Leaders" who take the "public heat"; heat created by the 
corrupt system's premier "Character Assassins" and opinion makers we 
call "the Media". Politicians do not now, nor have they ever run 
democratic countries themselves.

In Canada, politicians simply follow the instructions of Freemasonry 
which are sent to them through the Privy Council.

Priests of Zoroastrian Freemasonry, along with "their" Media, benefit 
most in the short run from this systemic corrupt conspiracy.


Glen EP Kealey, National President,
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity
PO Box 774, KemPTville, Ontario, Canada, K0G 1J0
Tel. (613) 258-2893; Fax. (613) 258-0015
Email : glen.kealey@sympatico.ca

A SculPTor of Words

Bing, Being, BOEING, Beijing, Bang
____________________________________

The SculPTor (1776-1867)
CIPI DONORS GET SET OF 4 VIDEO DISKS...or
20 Back ISSUES of the 'Kealey Papers'

WWW. WORDSCULPTOR .NET aka WWW. KEALEY .NET

Web Site of Glen Kealey, National President
Canadian Institute for Political Integrity (CIPI)

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JUNE 3, 2008

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Glen Kealey Workshop #1 Part 1/11

NeoAndDanTaller

Published on 3 May 2009

SUBSCRIBE 98

Glen Kealey Workshop #1 Part 1/11 http://www.wordsculptor.net


Glen Kealey - Workshop #2


Glen Kealey - Workshop #2

Jerd Guillaume-Sam

Published on 28 Oct 2012When I Woke Up!

When I finally woke up I took a look around. I saw city halls, courthouses, houses of government, churches, schools, and universities by the hundreds and thousands. I saw systems systems for managing the land, the air, and the water; systems for managing human behavior; systems for managing religion; systems for managing learning; systems for managing food, shelter, clothing; systems for managing love and procreation: a vast complex of carefully engineered systems. I saw millions of people working, not for themselves, but for someone else. I saw millions of people doing, not what they themselves want to do, but what someone else wants them to do. I saw the depressing evidence of a people who have externalized and institu- tionalized-in fact, have tried to standardize-the very nature of humanity. I saw a whole people whove lost the way of life and in its place have built a technological monster which does most of their hard work, carries their water, delivers their food, raises their kids, makes their decisions, says their prayers, transports them, informs them, entertains them, and controls the people it serves, absolutely. I also saw that the monster, seemingly unable to manage itself, was running wild, totally out of visible control, ripping the land to pieces, spreading poisons, filling the air with filth, dumping garbage and shit in the rivers and lakes and oceans. I saw all that, and I saw the people, millions of them, crowded together in cities, living side by side in towns, villages, rural areas. But I didnt see a single community. Is someone doing all of this on purpose ? Yes, Persian Zoro-Astrian/Zoro-Babel Freemasonry is doing it on purpose! The SculPTor

 





WHO ARE THE ANUNNAKI ? & WHAT DOES RH NEGATIVE MEAN?


KASH ME’HOUT IAMQUEENSUPREME

Published on 20 Apr 2018

I'M JUST HERE TO MAKE YOU THINK #IAMTHEGLITCH Fair Use Act Disclaimer This site is for educational purposes only. Fair Use Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Fair Use Definition Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as commentary, criticism, news reporting, research, teaching or scholarship. It provides for the legal, non-licensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author’s work under a four-factor balancing test.

Virginia Morisot7 months ago

O- blood is universally accepted by all blood types because it is 100 percent original human blood.....if it were alien ie nonhuman blood it would be universally rejected. This is born out by the Rh- mother's body rejecting the Rh+ fetus. It is the non human monkey gene that is detected and rejected even though the fetus itself is human. There is no missing protein in the Rh- blood. A protein was artificially introduced to cause the human system to accept the non human monkey gene. This scientifically debunks evolution and establishes genetic manipulation of human dna

holy honey badger3 months ago

Imagine if you will God creates man the negative blood type because man was made from clay in Gods image so these first humans had all kinds of special abilitys now if you create a slave race your not going to try to make them smarter because you dont want them doing anything but your commands and rg neg cant be cloned so they add rheses dna to dumb us and make us more controlable look at modern day schools they arent testing intelligence theyre testing obediance


kim kendrick
5 months ago

O- gave birth to 2 O- kids. Refused the shot. My kids are 29 and 24 and neither had any vaccinations

MrAac20201 month ago

My brother is RH negative...Good Lord, if there really is such things as alliens i wish to hell they would come down here and take his ass with them. It would be his only hope

Dave Bentley1 month ago

A- here... I have witnessed a few very strange things in my lifetime. I am now 65. My wife says I should try to recall it all on paper. I am still thinking about it. I have had events in my life that are very personal and strange. Should we speak of these things ? I am not sure. Should we open ourselves about something we can't even understand about ourselves ? If it is good should we share ? I feel conflicted....Will we bring harm to ourselves and our children ? I know how our government works.


Astarte Sashimi
1 month ago (edited)

I feel as if everybody here in this world acts fake, they are afraid of being them true selves, I do not get on well with many people , just from rh negative, I can feel the energies of people around me and this world makes me sick sometimes.... I WOULD LIKE TO CREATE A RH NEGATIVE INTERNATIONAL GROUP IN WHERE WE CAN DISCUSS INTERESTING AND ACTUAL THINGS AND WE CAN MAKE FRIENDS...I believe the rh negative people are better, we are people that really care about others and the world we are not fake and we are more sensitive, empathic, artistic, noble, romantic, friendly and we never get ill. we are AWAKE, LETS REUNITE AND CHANGE THE WORLD! we are not the same, WE ARE DIFFERENT. contact me if you feel the same and need a friend like you!!


Dee Lee2 months ago (edited)

The Anunnaki were the Anakim (Sons of Anak). A tribe of post flood giants related to the pre flood Nephilim, an alien/human hybrid race (Alien as in off-world/other dimension angelic beings). They were as tall as cedar trees. The Nephilim were part of the reason for the flood. The post flood tribes of giants were eventually mopped up by god, but a dormant gene may still lie inside some humans, ready to come forth and plague the world once more.


ЯУАИ Joseph
2 months ago (edited)

Im RH A- everyone thinks im from another planet.


SpaceManAus
2 months ago

As a young boy around 45 years ago I watched on film on TV in Melbourne Victoria they found in the TV stations archives that was said to have been a live recording of the opening of Tutankhamen tomb They start the film telling the viewer the reason the film was made was because the search for the Kings tomb went on for a long time so long the archaeologist looking for the city of the king started going home thinking it may have been just a story and did not exist, but of cause they found it and the search began for the tomb, and it was decided that whoever found it had to record it live so no secrets could be kept, so in the film they showed the progress over time as they filmed the progress week by week and the discoveries they found it was a big event at the time as every Egyptian went there and had dug the hole area back down to ground level of the ruins in a six month period and when they did all the grass started to grow revealing all these two meter tracks going for miles they had made no sense to them as they tried to map them out, so they flew over it showing these four pictures of insects seven miles wide each one but what they could not understand was the spider was drawn with its eight eyes and speculated that they must have had microscopes to know this and had suspended water in rings of copper to make a crude microscope, but then they wondered why the grass was not growing and had the soil tested and it had been burnt with nuclear radiation six meters down and nothing will ever grow there, they had no idea how this was done because owe bombs go six inches down and three years later the grass grows back, so they move on to the opening of King Tutankhamen's tomb. This area was not brought back to ground level and they were walking in a trench about four foot deep and had come to the servants tomb and showed they had also found that as well, but the move on to open the kings chamber, and when they did it was empty except for the red marble sarcophagus and some vases and a small pile of cloths and said that they had buried the servant in the kings chamber and that the king would be in the tomb they passed on the way in, when they opened the lid to show the mummy they found he was covered in resin and that the people must have really liked him, because servants were not allowed to be mummified as this was only for royalty and is why they smuggled the resin in to the tomb in the vases and had poured it into his casket in an attempt to preserve him at great risk and is why they used the resin, today they are teaching a lie and are making out he was the king but this is not true. The man talking in the film said that this film is also why they found out how mummies were created, because back then they thought this mummy was going to be the best mummy ever found sealed in gold it would be so well preserved and were going to open and reveal the mummy live for all to see, well a lady had seen this filming and told them mummies were made first then placed in the tomb, but this was after they had made the recording, lucky for the people that got to see this film. When they went back to open up the servants tomb they found it had two doors with a curse on each one, but they did not believe in them and in they go and this is where it gets exciting because first you see this stone sarcophagus straight ahead they then pan to the left showing the artifacts you see in the museum going around from left to the wall behind the sarcophagus but when they look to the right side there was a small jet airplane about fifteen feet long as a guess with its jet thruster out the back and its wings taken off and leaning up against the fuselage, they then went on to open the stone sarcophagus to show King Tutankhamen and everyone's stood there in amazement of the golden casket, this is where they make the claim about the best looking mummy ever found and were going to do what they normally would not open it in the tomb, but because it was live they were going to show the world. So when they lifted the lid off the golden casket, they discover the gold mask and again the look in awe they then removed it as well and to their amazement there was a book under his arms about twelve inches by eight inches wide and two inches thick, they were all very excited because he explained that the only peace of Egyptian papyrus was a corner of a page with three words on it, that was left behind when they had burnt the oxygen from the tomb and to find this book was potentially worth more than all the gold you seen in the tomb, and said if he could open the book he would love to show us inside. He goes to open it and all was quiet not even anyone breathing, he reads the cover and it said it was the diary of the king Tutankhamen and opens to the first page, it talks about who his parents were and when they ruled as king and queen and when he became king, they then go to the next pages two and three and on these pages were the pictures of the four insects outside, each one had a UFO landed on them, drawn exactly as people report them today, and each one had its own humanoid spaces in front. The first race had a normal disk shape craft with the square top and port holes in it, landing gear with hydraulics, hoses and a ladder in the centre and these two humanoids that were boy and girl I would say as they had them in pairs each race, these pair were five feet tall with pointy ears long hair and long beards. Next were tall like us except for the pointy ears, and there ship was the disk shape with the dome top, ladder and landing gear. The third were exactly like us but with tight blue suits long blond hair and had a triangle shaped craft with the circles in each corner landing gear and ladder in the middle under the craft. And the four now even they are humanoid these were like the greys but they were tall about thirteen feet tall and there craft was disk shaped but had the three domes under the craft and landing gear and ramp in the middle. He then read the text in the centre at the bottom of the page and it read that the Egyptians were being visited by four other worlds in their time and these were there landing pads so they could spot them from space for when they return This is where the film had ended as a man comes up and whispers in the ear of the man reading the book and said I have been told I must close the book at this stage end the movie came to an end, they had to play this again the next night because people had demanded to see it again, so they did and all that I have told you was cut out and I have never seen it again.


Richard Zedman
3 weeks ago

I hope they do come back to rule the world They couldn't do a worse job as the governments are doing to the place now


Michael Baker
1 month ago

Ive been documenting this and studying it for 17 yrs your video is spot on and correct, but theres more! Keep searching i cant tell you. You have to find out for your self, ill give u a clue ‘it explains why one president put his head in his hands and started crying saying ‘but i have a daughter to raise here! Deep rabbit hole!


Philander Supermarkert
6 months ago

..they are on to us ....

Rocko2 months ago

Hi I'm irish dark hair and dark eyes So was my mum she's o _ and I'm o + I had two sons one red haired with green eyes he is o _ like his dad and grandmother on his dad's side and they have red hair and brown eyes My oldest son is like my mum and me and he's o_ as Well so why do they have so many idea what areal o_ should look like usually it's people with red hair and blue eyes like the baskin people I'm so mixed up why does it matter so much in any how It's just something else to decide us like our nationality Or our race and colour just all let's get on no matter what we are or have in our blood now that's the most important thing to bring us all together as one Peace and love to all my brother's and sisters who ever you may be x



Early man in the stone age - Social Sciences

Elearnin

Published on 4 Sep 2012

Early man in the stone age - This is a Social Sciences video for kids that talks about the early men in the stone age and how he traveled for food and other needs. All of us would be aware that early men roamed the earth around two million years ago, who are now referred to as 'hunter-gatherers'. They owe their name to their ways of hunting for food. They usually hunted wild animals, gathered fruits, vegetables, roots and leaves. They also caught fish and birds for food. It proved the fact that gathering plant produce was an important means of obtaining food. The early men were tailored to rough it out in the wild. They had the necessary skills of alertness, agility and presence of mind which enabled them to catch the fast running and sometimes dangerous wild animals. They also knew about the seasons when fruits would ripen and could differentiate between edible and poisonous plants and plant produce. These pre-historic people often moved from place to place due to four main reasons. They are: - Firstly, the early men moved to another place when all the food resources have been exhausted. In search of new animals and vegetation, they travelled elsewhere to find food. - Secondly, the early men mirrored the migration patterns of wild animals in search of food, to ensure that they not get separated from their own source of food. - Thirdly, since different plants are bound to bear fruit in different seasons, the early men have also moved places according to the seasons. - Lastly, early men moved to places where there was sufficient water, often camping close to seasonal or perennial lakes, streams or rivers. Another reason why the early men were vagabonds could also be the need to stay connected with other people, namely relatives or friends. The pre-historic people always traveled on foot until the discovery of pulling carts. The very first experts who confirmed the existence of the Early Man happened to be archaeologists. The pre-historic tools and things used by the early men proved to be invaluable in the discovery and study of their life style. Many of the tools made out of bone, wood and stone have survived over the centuries, helping us understand the ancient ways of living of the Stone Age men. Stone tools used by our ancestors were extremely important. The tools enabled the people to hunt, cut bones and meat, chop wood and fruits and scrape bark from the trees and hides of the animals and dig the ground for roots. Wood was chopped to make fire and to build huts. There were also special tools which were used to stitch together animal skins to make clothes.

Who Lived on Earth 100,000 Years Ago?

5,277,630 views

Ridddle

Published on 4 Oct 2017

SUBSCRIBE 2.2M

Subscribe to my NEW Channel!!!!! ► "Meet, Arnold!" - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NsoJa... If you like this video - put Thumb Up button (please) and ►Subscribe to Ridddle channel! - https://goo.gl/Ez7t4V See You Soooooooooooooooon ;)

 

Cro Magnon Man

 


https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Cro-Magnon-Man-3385192

Cro Magnon Man, also known as early modern humans, were the first Homo Sapiens to migrate from the Near East into Europe. According to archeologists, this was the first time the Momo Sapiens migrated out of the continent of Africa. They arrived in eastern Europe about 43,000 B.C. and in western Europe about 43,000 B.C. Fossils of Cro Magnon man was first discovered in a rock shelter located in the hamlet of Les Eysles in the Dordogne Valley of Southwestern France. Later discoveries were made in a number of caverns in Soluture, France, Germany and central Europe.

Skeletal remains and the artifacts discovered in this region were associated to the Aurigmacian Culture, the first modern human culture of Europe by archeologists. A culture is defined as the social heritage of a group (organised community or society), It is a pattern of responses discovered, developed, or invested during the group’s history of handling problems which arise from interactions among its members, and between them and their environment. Early modern humans created the Aurihnacian Culture. They possessed their own language, shelter, tools and art. Their tools are described as having been made of bone and flint. The worked bone were antler points with groves scored in the bottom of the bone. The flint tools they created include bladelets and blades prepared from stone cones. They also made jewelry such as pendants and ivory beads.

 


 

 


First Man - Curiositystream - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QdyAjYUEwGk


Heart Attack

Published on 6 Sep 2018

SUBSCRIBE 9.2K

Legenda - Ative no youtube a tradução automática. Subtitles - Activate on youtube, automatic translation. First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé) First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé) First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé) First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé) First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé) First Man - Legendado (With Subtitles - ATIVE no Rodapé)

Caption author (Arabic)

Saaleh Almaazig

Caption author (Dutch)

Yung Ma

Caption authors (Turkish)

MAYOMAX MAYO PLAJ KIYAFETLERİAnıl Gürler


History Documentary [HD] - Stories From The Stone Age: The Human Adventure


Discovery History

Published on 27 Nov 2016

More Documentaries : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dECmL... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D4n0n...

 History Documentary [HD] - Stories From The Stone Age: The Human Adventure More Documentaries :

https://goo.gl/TAHNrg BBC, Documentary Largest, Humanity #BBC #clinton Stories from the Stone Age:

The Human Adventure Please Subscribers My Channel : https://goo.gl/Hb9X9c G+ : https://goo.gl/eRQ9fy


Jared Discusses Alan Watt With Glen Kealey

https://archive.org/details/JaredDiscussesAlanWattWithGlenKealey

Glen Kealey’s website directed to Alan Watt’s website

Kealey.net

WordSultor.net

Sufis, Arabic secret society is  backing Alan Watt and is basically purchased Alan Watt, who is now an employee of Sufis A Secret Society, who paid for Alan Watt’s trip to India …

End of Nations, No Startling Revelations:

"The Biggest Shake-up from Times Medieval, As Global Migration's

Transfer of People Move 'cross the Globe Each Seeking a Living, 

Many Move to U.K. where Welfare's a-Giving, 

World Engineers Planned with Determinations

To Bring Common Culture and End of Nations,
A Humanistic Culture Always Brings Horror,
Ideals of the Soviet or Nazi Bring Slaughter,
Human Animals, No More Sacred than Sheep,
We'll Be Beaten in Gulags before Final Sleep,
"It's Necessary" they say, "To Bring World Peace",
Yet the Banking Cabal's to Still Own the Lease
Over Control of Money, so Same Old Boss,
Capitalism/Socialism, Up for the Toss,
One Thing's for Sure, Same Tyrants Remain,
Using Diabolic Dialectic, Crisis Brings Gain"
 Alan Watt Nov. 23, 2010

Nov. 23, 2010 (#713)

Alan Watt "Cutting Through The Matrix" LIVE on RBN:

 

Poem Alan Watt Nov. 23, 2010:

End of Nations, No Startling Revelations:

"The Biggest Shake-up from Times Medieval,
As Global Migration's Transfer of People
Move 'cross the Globe Each Seeking a Living,
Many Move to U.K. where Welfare's a-Giving,
World Engineers Planned with Determinations
To Bring Common Culture and End of Nations,
A Humanistic Culture Always Brings Horror,
Ideals of the Soviet or Nazi Bring Slaughter,
Human Animals, No More Sacred than Sheep,
We'll Be Beaten in Gulags before Final Sleep,
"It's Necessary" they say, "To Bring World Peace",
Yet the Banking Cabal's to Still Own the Lease
Over Control of Money, so Same Old Boss,
Capitalism/Socialism, Up for the Toss,
One Thing's for Sure, Same Tyrants Remain,
Using Diabolic Dialectic, Crisis Brings Gain"
Alan Watt Nov. 23, 2010

 

Poem & Dialogue Copyrighted Alan Watt - Nov. 23, 2010 (Exempting Music, Literary Quotes, and Callers' Comments)

http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com/transcripts/Alan_Watt_CTTM_LIVEonRBN_713_End_of_Nations__No_Startling_Revelations_Nov232010.html

Hi folks.  I am Alan Watt and this is Cutting Through The Matrix on November 23, 2010.  Newcomers should look into cuttingthroughthematrix.com web site.  You’ll see a whole bunch of sites listed there; these are the official sites I have, the only official sites I have.  These are mine; anything else is bogus, with my name on it that is.  Bookmark these sites for future use because sometimes I have problems with the main .com site.  If you’ve got them bookmarked you can get the latest shows for download for free.  There are hundreds of audios for download from all the sites listed there.  They all have the same audios for download and they all have transcripts in English of a lot of the talks I’ve given, for download and print up.  If you want transcripts in other languages, you will also see listed there alanwattsentientsentinel.eu and you can find transcripts in the other languages there for download and print up.  While you are at it too, remember you are the audience that brings me to you.  If you are getting something out of the histories that I’m giving you and have given you in the past, and how I fill in the little blank spots that are left out of the news, deliberately of course, then keep supporting me and you can do so by buying the books, CDs and DVDs that I have for sale on the web sites.  I don’t get backed by advertisers and in fact I turn them down.  That way I’ve got a freer hand to do things.  But I need your support to keep going so buy the items and donate to keep me going.  [Order and donation options listed above.]  Some people just send cash; so far they are still exchanging it banks, although everything is dropping like crazy right now, plus they tack on an incredible exchange rate.  Wiring money across the waters is awfully expensive and if you want to post a check from Money Gram it will take about 7 days to get here by air.  That hopefully will help me to keep these sites going and keep doing what I’m doing. 

 

We are going through the biggest transformations in history since the industrial revolution really.  That’s what the big boys said themselves many years ago in their talks, at their big, big meetings on their plans for the world. These are the greatest changes we’ve seen in an awful long time.  It’s not just cultural changes, but they also mentioned that vast, vast movements of people would go out across the world from one country to the next and so on.  Well, we have seen that over the last 10 years or more in fact, and yet they made these speeches over 30 years ago, sometimes 40 years ago, at the global meetings they were having when they predicted they would bring the world to the state it is in now. Of course through financial collapse and so on, economic crisis, they would bring the world under The World Bank and the IMF.  And that’s what we are living through as well, never mind all the cultural changes, which they said they would bring in, which we have seen happen.  We are living through a script.  A script though that’s incredibly well organized and it’s not difficult when you realize that the richest people on the planet, who run the whole money system, for the whole planet, basically run all the front organizations and the think tanks and all the NGO groups and charities that lobby and promote the various causes.  They all work together, along separate roads, to bring themselves on to the same road at the end… which is a form of scientific socialism for the entire planet, of course run by the big boys at the top, who have always been there.  I'll be back with more after this break.

 

Hi folks.  We’re back and we’re Cutting Through The Matrix.  As I say, we are living through a script.  You have to delve into your histories to fit the puzzles together.  It’s like lots of puzzles within puzzles and it’s only here and there that you get little scattered pieced of information, sometimes just one paragraph in some thick, dry, old, dusty book and you put that together with other dry paragraphs, or one-liners or comments or statements by authors and big movers, and you start to see that you truly are living in a script. These guys don’t sit at the top saying, well, we govern the peoples. They sit at the top and they plan a particular type of future. 

 

It’s no secret really, once you get into them, that you find their problem has always been not just to how to get power or maintain power, it’s how to keep power over the general public.  You do get the sense, because these guys the top do go over their histories, and they look carefully at rebellions and revolutions down through the ages, and they don’t want them to have to be repeated on themselves, where they are ousted, especially when they have an agenda at stake.  Their whole idea – and all sides and all parts, it doesn’t matter if it’s communist or capitalist or whatever – they were into the same thing, sharing the wisdom between scientists – with their international science meetings – on how to use science to make the people more docile and compliant and more content with whatever lot they were handed by the big boys at the top, and whatever kind of system they were given to live in as well.

 

They talked about using incredible psychologies, which are there all the time.  You can’t pick up any media today where psychology isn’t involved in presenting something to you in a particular way, and even giving you an opinion on various topics – that’s the standard technique – including television as well.  For instance, after a President speaks they bring on about two experts at least – minimum two, sometimes four – and they will leave you with two main opinions, so you can pick one or the other, like a toss up.  Really, why would you need them?  If you heard the guy speak himself why would you need four interpreters to tell you what the President just said?  You see.

 

Games are played on us constantly and it’s a lifelong process.  It doesn’t stop, because you are under a scientific type of socialism.  Big players like Bertrand Russell and Brzezinski and various other people talked about the time not only was coming but technically was already there, 30 or 40 years ago, maybe even 50, where the media and the governments behind those countries that use the media, were using advertising agencies, like the Bernays type deals, to influence the behavior, to use the unconscious motivations of people, to direct those motivations into what the government wanted them to go into and create the kind of society they wanted.  They have got it really.  They’ve got it. 

 

Strangely, along with it too, there was a revolution going on at the same time and it was authorized by these same people who wanted to keep control.  Interesting really, when you look at it.  We always think of those in power as kind of static and wanting to maintain a type of system that doesn’t change very much – maybe more compliant people but not really for change and the opposite is true.  They wanted to create a different kind of society.  It isn’t until you understand the sexual revolution – that was promoted from the top, because these guys at the top promote all revolutions, for progress they call it, and see the outcomes of it – then you understand that it’s so similar to the communist ideology of the abolition of the family unit.  That’s what came out of it basically.  We saw countries building mainly single parent family homes, like Britain, massive social housing projects, because they knew in the 60s they were going to make it the way in society that eventually would come the 70s and 80s, most women would be single and the ones that were mothers would be single mothers.  They had designed a culture to make this happen. 

 

Unfortunately, when they sit at the top there, with full confidence talking about how they can manipulate us all and all our behaviors, they are quite correct in what they say.  It isn’t just an idle boast; they are not really boasting about it.  They take it in a more passé sort of way because they have had so many, maybe hundreds of years, maybe longer, of using these techniques on the general public.  They can make you believe and do whatever they want you to believe and do.  That’s a sad truth.  Terribly sad. 

 

We also know too, that the British Empire was to be the model system for the world to copy, under the United Nations.  They certainly used that structure by placing what they called democracies, or leaving those countries they pulled out of eventually, with a form of democracy, sometimes slightly altered for the cultural makeup of its people.  But basically standardizing a system; that was the technique that was used.  It’s still actually one of the tenets of the Royal Institute of International Affairs/Council on Foreign Relations, that they will not pull out of a country – that they have taken over, or invaded under any guise whatsoever – they will not pull out until they have set up a similar structure of this so-called democratic institution, based on England. 

 

Out of that was to come the global society, but not just any global society, it was a society where a very powerful government using scientific techniques would run every individual in almost a socialistic fashion, that the communists predicted would come in eventually.  The communists never got quite to it.  They did bring school-to-work in.  They picked children at school, they’d given them a few tests, very young, and then they would decide there and then what those children would be educated in.  If they picked you for an engineer you would get exactly what you needed to know to become an engineer, but nothing else.  That’s how they did it.  And then we find they do the same thing in the West, with the school-to-work projects and the various technical schools that were sprung up all over the place as well. 

 

So you see something that although they appear different – a soviet system and a western system, they appear different through the propaganda aspects of newspapers – when you actually look at what they are doing they are pretty well the same in structure, because they are aiming at the same ending.  Of course the general public didn’t know that eventually the Soviet structure was to be blended completely with that of the West… and so you’d have something that Lenin talked about.  After the dictatorship would be over, he said, a system would come out that wasn’t quite capitalist and not quite communist.  What they meant by that was a socialist scientifically-run society with experts running the general public, experts and governmental departments galore, of course.  He also said too, mind you, that they’d start up services, like police services, health services, educational services, which would eventually become authorities over the general public.  Because these are essential to take over the minds of people, the education is incredibly essential.  Education is just indoctrination to give you a view of reality and train you for your function in that society, to really serve it as a taxpayer. 

 

Therefore, nothing really surprises us when the Reece Commission came out in the 1950s, examining the foundations, the BIG foundations in America and Europe, and to find out that they were actually pushing what seemed to be communist front groups, and heavily funding them.  They were told by the CEOs of a couple of the foundations, and this was a hearing, this was a Congressional hearing, and a Senatorial hearing, on these foundations. They came out, from the CEOs of these foundations, that their job was to eventually merge the culture of the West with the Soviet system and their culture down the road.  Well that’s happened.  That has happened. 

 

It’s so fascinating to watch them set up first the League of Nations and then the United Nations to help bring about this as a sort of negotiating table where they supposedly would hammer out the differences and find ways to implement these grand schemes. And of course they are doing it too.  The United Nations was to become a form of governmental body, a world governmental body, or regulatory body.  It might change its name down the road when all this is accomplished of course, and we are almost there today… almost there.  There is not a law passed in your country that really does not come from the United Nations, be it criminal, or be it civil, or be it to do with building codes or whatever.  It all comes from departments in the United Nations and dished out to every country that signed on to them and implemented by what you think is your own country, into law.  They’ve got a finger into every single pie. 

 

Remember too, reading HG Wells, when he celebrated the set up of the League of Nations, the precursor of the United Nations, and he said that eventually the government will achieve what it always wanted to – he thought it was a great thing – and that was total power over every individual… with no family structure standing in the way, and no wife or husband to stand in the way of party loyalty to the system.  The government could talk directly to YOU as an individual and order you.  That’s why George Orwell, in his book 1984, starts off in his book where the big telescreen in his room talks directly to him.  There is no one there, you are on your own, you are kind of shaking with fear, and there is Big Brother, and Big Brother’s fronts, front spokespeople, dictating right to you, telling you what to do.  We are almost there, especially with the internet.  Some countries have already set up your private governmental internet connection so that government can notify you of whatever, directly to you and speak to you directly on your computer.  The rest will follow suit, I’m sure, very very shortly.  It’s all coming along very, very well. 

 

When you go through something like a financial crisis, that supposedly, and it’s so incredible, so incredibly farcical, that anybody would actually believe that no one saw this so-called explosion and bubble bursting with the economy, because they took the reins off of the economy years ago… years ago.  And all the watchdogs that watched over it to make sure that, yeah, they’d allow so much corruption to go on with trading and investments and little bubbles but it didn’t get out of hand.  Well they took all those reins off and said, we’ll go by this new technique which will help the market balance itself. They’ll be honest, these guys… trust us.  I'll be back with more after this break.

 

Hi folks.  I’m Alan Watt and we’re Cutting Through The Matrix, just talking about the big script that we live through.  It so reminds me of, again, Orwell’s portrayal of a time when a form of martial law would be used to the extreme.  Incredible security, under the constant threat of terrorism internally, and traitors and so on, like we are going through now.  You always have that in a reign of terror, by your government.  He showed you that the ‘proles’, the ordinary folk, really don’t count much because they don’t do much.  They don’t do much inquiry, thinking; they are pretty powerless.  They are kept out of the picture.  They go along.

 

They are really apolitical, most people.  Once they are out of university and they get out of that wild phase of their indoctrination by professors, they go back to just sitting back having a good time.  Bertrand Russell also said the same thing too, that most folk are apolitical, therefore minorities always change the future.  Believe you me, in a system run by money, naturally the richest minorities are the ones who run the system.  That makes quite natural sense doesn’t it?  Those who have the cash run the system.

 

We are run by foundations.  To show you, too, the agendas that they have, I’m going to put up a link tonight to this site called Global Governance 2025 at a Critical Juncture.  It’s put out by the Institute for Security Studies.  It’s also put out by the CIA.  It’s got the Office of the Director of National Intelligence from the US.  It’s also got inquiries to the councilor to the National Intelligence Council and to the EU Institute of Security Studies as well. These are the guys who put this together, so if you don’t think you are living through a script, well, go back and watch your comedies on television and enjoy yourself… because you are living through a script. 

 

Global Governance 2025

tponline.org

 

Global governance — the collective management of common problems at the international level — is at a critical juncture, according to a new report issued jointly by the ODNI’s National Intelligence Council (NIC) and the European Union’s Institute for Security Studies (EUISS). The report, Global Governance 2025 — a follow-on to the NIC’s 2008 report, Global Trends 2025—posits that the growing number of issues on the international agenda, and their complexity, is outpacing the ability of international organizations and national governments to address these challenges.

 

They have the plan for global governance and it’s to be here long before 2025.  In 2025 various things will come together that might cause disruptions within what once were nations, you see, because we are in the process right now of becoming not nations and we are called ‘states’ at the moment; every country is called a little state by the United Nations.  Eventually we have to get dissolved into regions.  They are already doing this in places like Canada with accords.  Just punch up Canadian accords and American accords, American-Canadian accords and you’ll see all these different agreements that mayors and provincial leaders and state senators have signed, with cross-border integration for sharing all resources and so on, energy and that kind of stuff.  That’s the set up for your regionalization which the United Nations laid down 40-50 years ago.  I’ll put this link up and you can go through it at your leisure.

 

Global Governance 2025:  at a Critical Juncture

acus.org

 

That’s only ONE of the many that are put out by the big think tanks and committees that help run the world for their masters.  Part of it too, is to move people, under Agenda 21, which is also called Sustainable Development now.  That was on the UN web site.  So many folk were talking about Agenda 21 that they tried to give it different names because they got such a bad name by people who were watching them.  [Alan laughing.]  They were spreading the word so they changed it to Sustainable Development, Millennium Goals, and that type of stuff.    Part of it is to move all the folk from the rural areas into the big cities, the overcrowded cities.  Of course, they are going to bring you down AS your population starts to die off and let you all die off in these big overcrowded slum cities.  That’s why, by the way, if you have been wondering why your cities haven’t had road repairs and major repairs for the last 30 years or so, it’s because they knew what they were going to do with you down the road.  Why put the cash in when eventually those big places will one day get bypassed or simply bulldozed? 

 

Russia plans to move its people to big towns, and this comes out from the Sydney Morning Herald in Australia. 

 

Russia plans to move its people to big towns

Andrew Osborn / November 18, 2010 / smh.com.au

 

MOSCOW: The Kremlin is considering the biggest geographical redistribution of its population since Joseph Stalin's forced deportations of entire nationalities in the 1940s.

 

Under the plans, which were leaked to the daily Vedomosti newspaper, most of Russia's 141 million population would be concentrated in just 20 urban centres.

 

At present they are spread sparsely over one-fifth of the Earth's surface.  (Alan:  That’s why they are so healthy, they are spread out.)

 

About 90 per cent of Russia's towns are relatively small, with populations of 100,000 people or less, many of them in remote locations.  (A:  Again, that’s why they are healthy and less crime in those places.  The crime is all in the city.)

 

The leaked plan said such places had ''no future'' and were not worth developing. (A:  Does that ring a bell?  …as I said earlier, dilapidated roads and everything everywhere else.)  Instead, it proposed relocating people to 20 giant urban centres, where Russia's main natural resources such as oil and gas were located.

 

Unlike in Stalin's day, when people were forced to move at gunpoint on the often spurious grounds that they were ''enemies of the people'' or Nazi collaborators, relocating would be optional and encouraged on economic grounds.  (A:  Of course it will be on economic grounds because they will make it so darn difficult to live in the country, by taxations, like they do in Canada.  That’s what they are doing here to get us all off the rural areas, massive taxations, that they will make it happen one way or another.)

 

Much of rural Russia is dying as young people move to towns and cities, and entire Soviet-era settlements which were built around just one or two factories are no longer economically viable.

 

''There is no need to fight against the current and we need to develop big cities and urban centres,'' the plan said, according to the newspaper.

 

Analysts said the plan, which would roll back the Soviet idea of urbanising the entire country, is likely to be heavily touted by the President, Dmitry Medvedev, as part of his agenda to modernise Russia.

 

''Changing the map of the country is a necessary but not simple task which needs to be done very carefully as any overreaction could lead to a fight for urban resources,'' a government official was quoted as saying.  (A:  I'll be back with more after this break.)

 

Hi folks.  We’re back, Cutting Through The Matrix.  Jacques Attali wrote in his book, Millennium: Winners and Losers in the Coming New World Order, published in 1991, he talked about the takedown of America especially and some other countries.  He was a big player at the United Nations and still is.  He was also the top honcho for Presidents for years in France.  He was more important, they said, in his dealings with diplomats than the Presidents themselves were.  In other words, he was a Kissinger type character, and he still is.  He’s written a book since then of course.  He mentioned about this new coming system where as we went international, as we were forced to go international, and how they would make it happen that we were international, and borders would disappear and so on.  He said that the next boat people would be Americans leaving their shores looking for work abroad.  People kind of scoffed at that at the time but I knew they could certainly make it happen, quite easily; they have done it before with other countries.  Once the money is pulled out from underneath you, you have nothing to fall back on, you see, and everything goes to pieces.  This is actually happening. 

 

Remember too, we are now in the age of what he also called the Managerial Class, the World Managers; the United Nations also calls them World Managers.  That’s what we are under right now.  We also heard at The World Bank meeting years ago, when Rockefeller and Rothschild attended and said that the present generation, this generation – this was in the 90s – would be the cannon fodder… the cannon fodder for this big shake-up to transform the world.  That’s how they see us, as cannon fodder basically.  They also said, you can’t make an omelet without breaking eggs.  So all this upheaval and joblessness and the corporations that were planned to take off, because of GATT and the World Trade Organization making it possible for them to all move to China, encouraging them and paying them to move to China by the way, with your tax money funding them to do it, it was all arranged long, long ago.  He talked about the Managerial Class would be a kind of nomadic group that would go from country to country working for the world government bodies in different countries, stationed in great cities across what used to be countries, and they’d be a form of new nomads, but very highly paid, extra perks and privileges and so on.  He also talked about the boat people.  He said eventually too, those with the highest qualifications would be accepted into this managerial class, the rest would have to fight and squabble, maybe even kill each other for a living.  He says, only the crème-de-la-crème would be taken into the high positions, to survive, to manage the world

 

Here is an article…

 

Young Americans flock overseas to teach English

ajc.com / By Bill Hendrick / March 1, 2010

 

(A:  Then they give you a story where one guy, for instance, gave an example of one fella, who was given the chance to either leave and go abroad and work or do some menial job back home.  He went abroad.  It says…)

 

Like tens of thousands of young Americans with degrees, but few job prospects, Salzman, 23, took off for South Korea to teach. The only requirements — no criminal record and a bachelor’s degree in anything.  (A:  …anything…)

 

And the school paid his airfare, is putting him up in a small apartment and will buy him a ticket home when his contract ends.

 

South Korea is the hot spot for such jobs, but untold thousands of new grads are teaching in Vietnam, Thailand, Hong Kong, Japan and China, where parents are gung-ho for English.

 

“These schools are interested in pronunciation, being able to make conservation, not rules of grammar,” says Dave Sperling, 48, who runs a Web-based business in Los Angeles helping foreign schools and recruiters find teachers.

 

And in an economy still shedding jobs, it’s boom-time for Asian schools looking for U.S. grads and a boon for young people like Salzman.  (A:  I should just mention here, I’ve got lots of people abroad who are doing these teaching jobs who get in touch with me, even in China.  Their standard of living is definitely way higher than what they left.)

 

“I have been going to school since I was four years old and was burned out from attending classes, taking exams and worrying about my future,” says Salzman, who has been in Daegu, South Korea, since last fall. “I did not want to get a mediocre job and live under my parents’ roof. So instead of worrying about finding a job or getting into graduate school like most of my friends, I decided to teach in Korea.”  (A:  …like most of my friends…   I decided to teach in Korea.)

 

So you see, things are really changing and they have been for quite a few years in this direction. But it isn’t just people to teach, it’s also for people for engineers that are qualified and so on. They are really recruiting them in these countries, for teaching as well but also to go into industry and bring their expertise with them.  Quite something.  So we are already going through this great flux. 

 

At the same time it’s interesting to look at what’s happening in North America with the relaxation of various rules under the NAFTA treaties and so on, with the massive influx of immigrants coming up from Latin America into the United States.  Of course Attali also said that eventually America would end up speaking primarily Spanish.  That was on the books, like a must-be thing.  It would just be that way; that’s what was going to happen.  Because it wasn’t just Mexico that was to come in, it was every other country eventually, under the NAFTA Agreements, in Latin America. 

 

We are seeing this.  At the same time you are seeing things in Europe been going on for years, as they merged Europe together, where people literally shop for the best place to live, where they can get good health care and often be put on welfare as soon as they come off the boat.  Britain has been the target of most of the countries that have collapsed from the old Soviet era and they are able to take off under the European Union to Britain.  Britain is about sunk now with massive debt.  There is an awful lot of corruption involved too of course, but massive debt and a welfare state; that also helped put it under.  That was planned too of course, because they are not stupid at the top.   They know the consequences of what they do.  Of course they do.  So we are seeing massive migrations of people… exactly as these guys said in their old books, 30, 40, 50, 60 years ago. 

 

So I would say we are right on schedule.  People often say to me, oh their plans are held back.  I don’t see it at all.  I think they are right on schedule with what they are doing and they are managing this very, very, very well. 

 

There is a caller from Kentucky on the line.  I should really take that now.  Is Jenny there from Kentucky? 

 

Jenny:  Yes.  And I’m going to talk, not talking exactly about what you were covering tonight.  I think that it’s essentially… what is… I hear you, I hear other people in the Patriot world, I don’t want to further their views on you because you have your own views.  Talking about… something they call esoteric spirituality and they say it’s all bad.  I’ve studied different kinds of spirituality and mysticism.  I’ve spent a great deal of energy studying that.  I do know there are groups like the Masons and other strange secret societies that call themselves esoteric that are most problematic.  But there is an interior dimension that I think is probably, when you get on a spiritual level, it’s healing.  Otherwise, everything is going to be what you call exoteric, and there is no dimension to it. 

 

Husband:  Can I chime in here.  I am…

 

Jenny:  Here is my husband.

 

Husband:  I am her husband.  We are both marking what we call the new world order studies and learning a great deal, very rapidly because a lot is coming out now and you’re doing a great job in bringing at lot of it out.  Just to talk about our background, I have been a Sufi Muslim and a Sufi for the past 22 years and now I’m in my second Sufi order.  My wife was in one of those orders and then she went to another one and now she has converted to Christianity and is an orthodox Christian with interest in the traditional Catholics who don’t believe that the Pope is actually the Pope.  Well this is where we are at.  We have been associated… and both of us are writers as well.  Sometime, when something called the Traditionalist or Perennial…

 

Alan:  Don’t plug anything here.  Just tell me your point will you?

 

Husband:  The point is this, we know esoteric spirituality because in a certain sense we practice it.  The evil of esoteric spirituality is based upon the perversion of something good, perversion of something very deep.  And this isn’t understood by, you know, Henry McCowell, and by John Coleman.  Now, of McCowell, he’ll simply say something like, well, these Cabalistic Masonic Jewish international bankers.  Well, there are probably people exactly like that.  That’s a good description.  But the Cabala is not just evil.  It’s not just an evil control system that was concocted by…

 

Alan:  Don’t give us a lecture on it, because what you are explaining is your take on something and your belief in something, but you surely must have a deeper point. 

 

Husband:  To give you our view of how the esoteric spirituality is a good thing.  It’s perverted by the powers that be and by the new world order and put to an evil use.  A friend of mine sent you a book by Rene Genoun called The Reign of Quantity and the Signs of the Times.  We’ve got some their books that we’d like to send you that will make this point, not to take up all the time on the air. 

 

Alan:  Well, I haven’t seen that come in.  Anyway I will look for it for sure.  What you are saying I understand, because you are talking about a spiritual side of nature, or man, which is getting knocked out of him right now in a materialistic society.  Of course that is happening.  Of course the worst horrors come out.  Either way you can get the same thing when people go too far overboard, in a spiritual sense, and mistake the spiritual side of it for nationality or even tribalism and then you end up with horror.  Or you can get it to the atheistic side where communism takes over and pretends that there is no deity, because in communism there was a higher order of religion, believe you me.  Then they start slaughtering people because they are just animals.  So you are quite right in that respect.  Now we are getting reduced today to the quantum physics basically; we are just little molecules running around.  In fact, they have actually told us, through one theory that was pushed big time, that we are just like a virus and whatever we do or say or whatever motivates us, is the end compilation of billions of cells that are all trying to survive, and they make you what you are, when they emerge at the surface basically.  Whatever comes out of your mouth is not your brain saying so; it’s the compilation of billions of cells that are all trying to survive over each other.  That’s what they are trying to say that humanity IS, just basically a machine.  Of course we are more than machines. We have the ability to take life absolutely.  It’s the easiest thing to take life, like any other animal, but we also have the ability to spare life as well.   So we have choices which animals don’t have.  We definitely have choices.  Unfortunately in a materialistic, totally materialistic world, as we are getting basically decimalized and counted and numbered and stamped, we are just numbers on computers.  That’s what we are today.  We are not really people anymore.  We are losing the value of the spiritual side of humanity, so I quite agree with what you are saying there. 

 

The thing is too, you’ve got to understand, the Cabala was utterly changed a long, long time ago.  If you go into Egypt too, you’ll find the early tracings of Cabala, which were different again.  You’ve got to understand too, that power is always power.  Any elite who has the ability to read and the rest don’t, will always use that power to maintain themselves and mislead others.  You can lose yourself as well IN spirituality if you are not careful.  You’ve got to understand what you are dealing with too.  Carl Jung really expressed so much in his writings, because he dabbled in both sides of things, from the psychological side, the psychiatric side, and from the spiritual side.  He was also aware that the coming system, he said, was like an iron curtain over the world, of bureaucracy and people and numbers, and not seen as humans at all.  That was his biggest fear, he said, before he died, in his last book.  He’s quite right.  That’s what we have.  We’ve got civil services, agencies.  We’ve got organizations, groups, all fighting over materialism. 

 

Husband:  The known called the Reign of Quantity, where everything is quantified and the qualities. 

 

Alan:  That’s right.

 

Husband:  You don’t consider them to exist, which is why you don’t know what a human being is.

 

Alan:  And the thing is too, under all the guise of fairness and liberalism – believe you me, liberals are the most unjust of all because under the guise of freeing everybody, if you don’t agree with them on anything, they do not allow your opinion to count at all.  In fact, they’d rather kill you, which we saw in the Soviet system too.  So there is a lot of trickery involved.  Really, everyone should let everyone live the way they are according to live, as long as they don’t stand on your toes. Almost like the true anarchist would say as well.  He’d walk through life and he would take bits of wisdom from here and there but he would not allow anybody to force their opinions on him.  We are living in a system where opinions are forced upon us and we are told how to behave, we are told what to think, we are told what kind of world order we are coming in to and we will obey, or else, by force or whatever means necessary.  THAT is not freedom by any means.  Thanks for calling in and I’ll look forward to seeing the books. 

 

We’ll go on to Dave from Japan; he’s waiting there.  Are you there Dave?

 

Dave:  Yes, hey Alan.  First, I’ll just get it out of the way.  I’ll tell everybody out there to give this guy some money, 5, 10 bucks and don’t just do it once, do it as much as you can because I don’t know what I’d do without your radio show.  It helps a lot. 

 

Alan:  Thanks. 

 

Dave:  Just a quick question, kind of off subject but something I’ve been kind of curious about and I can’t really find too much…  People, even when I used to listen to Alex Jones, he wouldn’t even touch on it.  It is Israel.  Seems like everybody’s getting pushed around by this globalist agenda and Israel is the only person that kind of just gets a free pass.  What’s your take on that?

 

Alan:  Well it is.  It’s the only country in this world now that’s allowed to be nationalist.  It’s the most nationalist country on the whole planet.  And anyone else who says they are nationalist is booed and decried by every other country who joined up with the UN and they are now denationalizing their countries, becoming states, and becoming provinces within regions.  That last article I talked about, their global agenda for 2025 and so on and the crisis, these guys have it all mapped out.  There will be no countries as such.  So does Jacques Attali.  Israel, of course, is going off in a different route all together; it is ultra nationalist.  In fact it’s more… it’s more in kin with what they claimed the Nationalist Socialism of Germany was, during World War II, maybe to a greater degree than even Germany was.  They certainly have got off with plain murder, in the world’s eyes, but not according to themselves.  They see and they are taught to see things in a different way, from childhood, in Israel.  They are also backed by the most powerful, wealthiest people on the planet and we live in a monetary system worldwide, so naturally those with the cash will run the show and certainly back them.  But yeah, you are quite right, Israel is the exception in the makeup of the whole planet, that’s not integrating with everyone else.  They are not opening their borders to the mass floodgate of immigration from elsewhere, from all different faiths and nationalities and so on.  It doesn’t happen.  Hold on and we’ll come back after this break.

 

Hi folks.  We’re back, Cutting Through The Matrix and is Dave still there from Japan?

 

Dave:  Yes, sir.

 

Alan:  You were talking about Israel and yeah, we’ve got to understand that Israel has a purpose because it was set up under the Zionist movement, which is well recorded in the Israeli sites in fact; you can find all you need to know about Zionism.  Zionism also had a world purpose and it was born out, and was part of the world revolutionary movement that Karl Marx advocated too.   In fact the man who really is credited for even coming up with the idea of a return to a place called Palestine, was the mentor of Karl Marx and that was Moses Hess.  You have to read up on the writings of Moses Hess.  He also said that Hebrews or Jews had lost their way in life, because they were integrating with society, and he said their purpose had always been really, to guide humanity, as he put it, along the correct directions, bringing them under what he called God’s Law.  He became a staunch advocate that they do this.  So there is a revolutionary side of Judaism as well, which isn’t mentioned much today but it’s still ongoing.  It’s revolutionary in social affairs and that’s why it’s pushed so much in left wing Judaism as opposed to the orthodox and so on.  And they push world socialism because it’s part of a religion really.  Even atheistic Jews are taught this kind of course of action, and they are guided through their own publications.  So it was always to bring in this kind of society, that they claimed would be just and fair and all the rest of it, but run under laws, strict laws.  However, it wasn’t the first time that had happened because you’ve got to understand too, there was a first Jewish revolution and that culminated in AD70 when the diaspora began, they were kicked out of the holy land.  Because the revolution they had there was not just based in that area.  It was based across the ancient world, wherever they congregated and had their own neighborhoods.  They hoped to get a worldwide revolution going in the ancient times; they were actually proselytizing at that time and taking recruits.  So it’s interesting to see it culminating in what’s called the New Israel.  Many Jews from outside don’t really accept Israel as even being Jewish; they say it’s really a communist or socialist system all together, a materialistic system as opposed to a Godly system.  There are lots of squabbles amongst them and there were actually riots in fact, in England when they tried to set it up.  After the Balfour Declaration there were riots between Jews in London, pitched battles in the streets and the police were involved, because they did not want this type of Israel to be set up.  They said that the Israel was to be set up, led by God, not by men.  Of course we know that Rothschild – it’s well documented in Morley’s books on Rothschild – that he funded, even in the 1800s they were funding Russian Jews into Israel and that really sped up after they had the communist revolution; they were allowed to pass into Israel without problems from the Soviet system.  Many of them were atheistic and hardened communists.  That left wing policy still runs them today in a communistic fashion, but they are backed by the most powerful lobbies on the planet.  Here’s the key too, if it’s a natural way then everyone else should be just as nationalistic, and we wouldn’t be in the mess we are in today.  Think about that.

 

Dave:  Thank you for taking my call and I’ll let you go.

 

Alan:  Thanks for calling.  There are always two ways to see something and if everyone else stood up the same way as they do, we would not be in the mess we are in.

 

From Hamish and myself from Ontario, Canada, good night and may your God or your Gods GO with you. 

 

 

Topics of show covered in following links:

 

Global Governance at a Critical Juncture

Global Governance and Transatlantic Group

Russia Plans to Move Populations into Large Cities (Agenda 21--Sustainable Development)

Thousands of Uni. Grads go Overseas for Work

Jared Discusses Alan Watt With Glen Kealey

https://archive.org/details/JaredDiscussesAlanWattWithGlenKealey

Glen Kealey’s website directed to Alan Watt’s website

Kealey.net

WordSultor.net

Sufis, Arabic secret society is  backing Alan Watt and is basically purchased Alan Watt, who is now an employee of Sufis A Secret Society, who paid for Alan Watt’s trip to India …

Alan Watt "Cutting Through The Matrix" LIVE on RBN: "The Concrete ...

www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com/.../Alan_Watt_CTTM_LIVEonRBN_659_The_Co...

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Sep 8, 2010 - I'm back and we're Cutting Through The Matrix. Most folk take it ..... Jordan: I was told you joined the Sufis, Arabic secret societyAlan: You were ...

Alan Watt "Cutting Through The Matrix" LIVE on RBN: "End of Nations ...

www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com/.../Alan_Watt_CTTM_LIVEonRBN_713_End_of...

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Nov 23, 2010 - We're back and we're Cutting Through The Matrix. ..... I do know there are groups like the Masons and other strange secret societies that call themselves ... I have been a Sufi Muslim and a Sufi for the past 22 years and now ...

Viewing Alan Watt with post-Kealey Eyes - The Invisible Academy

theinvisibleacademy.5forum.net › The Foundation Series › Debunker Underground

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Jan 3, 2010 - I don't think there's enough of this (the title) amongst Alan Watt fans and former fans. ... the realization of how asinine and illogical Kealey is and have reverted back to Watt's ... There's also a religious Sufi element that Kealey reveled too. ... You pull in a cult following of zealots who hang on your every word.

The Sufi Conspiracy | Conspiracy School

www.conspiracyschool.com/blog/sufi-conspiracy

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Why did Alan Watts take to alcoholism in his twilight years ...

https://www.quora.com/Why-did-Alan-Watts-take-to-alcoholism-in-his-twilight-years-es...

Firstly, I know Alan Watts' work inside-out and back-to-front. .... and passion of Christ, and were to assume that Christianity is nothing other than a death cult.

Masonic media agents - The Babylon Matrix It is the glory of God to ...

www.thebabylonmatrix.com/index.php?title=911:Masonic_media_agents

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Apr 4, 2016 - From esoteric-satanism to Sufi Islam, and from there to 'Knights Templar .... "A whileback I became aware of the research of Eric Hufschmid (who it turns out .... Secret society / ancient theology researcher (skips the Jesuit connection ... Alan Watt used to appear on this show every month, but recently he has ...

New World Order the Ancient Plan of Secret Societies | Freemasonry ...

https://www.scribd.com/.../New-World-Order-the-Ancient-Plan-of-Secret-Societies

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 Rating: 4.5 - ‎8 votes

Alan Watt Recommended Book List. The David .... This book shows why members of these secret societies can ..... In {960 -sufi.ered a narrow defeat in tRe ;presidential i'ace ..... Masonry can be traced back more than 5,000 years to the secret

Quran - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quran

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The Quran is the central religious text of Islam, which Muslims believe to be a revelation from .... Some scholars such as Watt prefer the second meaning of "ummi" – they take .... Sufi philosophers view the question as artificial or wrongly framed. ... Quran they would never produce its like not though they backed one another.

http://www.cuttingthroughthematrix.com/transcripts/Alan_Watt_CTTM_LIVEonRBN_713_End_of_Nations__No_Startling_Revelations_Nov232010.html



The genetic history of Ice Age Europe

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/05/160502131231.htm

Date: May 2, 2016

Source: Howard Hughes Medical Institute#

Summary: Analyses of ancient DNA from prehistoric humans paint a picture of dramatic population change in Europe from 45,000 to 7,000 years ago, according to a new study. The new genetic data reveal two big changes in prehistoric human populations that are closely linked to the end of the last Ice Age around 19,000 years ago.


Three ~31,000-year-old skulls from Dolni Vestonice in the Czech Republic. For the next five thousand years, all samples analyzed in this study -- whether from Belgium, the Czech Republic, Austria, or Italy -- are closely related, reflecting a population expansion associated with the Gravettian archaeological culture.

Credit: Martin Frouz and Jirí Svoboda

Analyses of ancient DNA from prehistoric humans paint a picture of dramatic population change in Europe from 45,000 to 7,000 years ago, according to a new study led by Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator David Reich at Harvard Medical School.

The new genetic data, published May 2, 2016 in Nature, reveal two big changes in prehistoric human populations that are closely linked to the end of the last Ice Age around 19,000 years ago. As the ice sheet retreated, Europe was repopulated by prehistoric humans from southwest Europe (e.g., Spain). Then, in a second event about 14,000 years ago, populations from the southeast (e.g., Turkey, Greece) spread into Europe, displacing the first group of humans.

Archeological studies have shown that modern humans swept into Europe about 45,000 years ago and caused the demise of the Neanderthals, indicated by the disappearance of Neanderthal tools in the archaeological record, explained Reich. The researchers also knew that during the Ice Age -- a long period of time that ended about 12,000 years ago, with its peak intensity between 25,000 and 19,000 years ago -- glaciers covered Scandinavia and northern Europe all the way to northern France. As the ice sheets retreated beginning 19,000 years ago, prehistoric humans spread back into northern Europe.

But prior to this study, there were only four samples of prehistoric European modern humans 45,000 to 7,000 years old for which genomic data were available, which made it all but impossible to understand how human populations migrated or evolved during this period. "Trying to represent this vast period of European history with just four samples is like trying to summarize a movie with four still images. With 51 samples, everything changes; we can follow the narrative arc; we get a vivid sense of the dynamic changes over time," said Reich. "And what we see is a population history that is no less complicated than that in the last 7,000 years, with multiple episodes of population replacement and immigration on a vast and dramatic scale, at a time when the climate was changing dramatically."

The genetic data show that, beginning 37,000 years ago, all Europeans come from a single founding population that persisted through the Ice Age, said Reich. The founding population has some deep branches in different parts of Europe, one of which is represented by a specimen from Belgium. This branch seems to have been displaced in most parts of Europe 33,000 years ago, but around 19,000 years ago, a population related to it re-expanded across Europe, Reich explained. Based on the earliest sample in which this ancestry is observed, it is plausible that this population expanded from the southwest, present-day Spain, after the Ice Age peaked.

The second event that the researchers detected happened 14,000 years ago. "We see a new population turnover in Europe, and this time it seems to be from the east, not the west," said Reich. "We see very different genetics spreading across Europe that displaces the people from the southwest who were there before. These people persisted for many thousands of years until the arrival of farming."

The researchers also detected some mixture with Neanderthals, around 45,000 years ago, as modern humans spread across Europe. The prehistoric human populations contained three to six percent of Neanderthal DNA, but today most humans only have about two percent. "Neanderthal DNA is slightly toxic to modern humans," explained Reich, and this study provides evidence that natural selection is removing Neanderthal ancestry.

The study was an equal collaboration of David Reich's laboratory with the laboratories of Svante Pääbo and Johannes Krause, which worked together to extract and analyze the DNA from these ancient bones. Ancient specimens are frequently contaminated with microbial DNA, as well as DNA from archaeologists or lab technicians who have handled the specimens.

To get around these problems, the research team used a technique called in-solution hybrid capture enrichment. The team used about 1.2 million 52-base-pair DNA sequences corresponding to positions in the human genome that they were interested in as bait to target specific segments of DNA. After they washed the ancient DNA over the 1.2 million probe sequences, the researchers sequenced the ancient DNA that was captured by the probes.

To eliminate contamination that may have been introduced from handling the specimens, the researchers restricted analysis of many of the samples to sequences that had characteristic lesions of ancient DNA -- a cytosine to uracil error at the beginning of the sequence. Modern DNA typically does not have these errors, so contamination can be avoided by restricting the analysis to the sequences that do have them, said Reich.

"The ability to obtain genome-scale data from ancient bones is a new technology that's only been around for the last five or six years," Reich emphasized. "It's a new scientific instrument that makes it possible to look at things that have not been looked at before."

Story Source:

Materials provided by Howard Hughes Medical InstituteNote: Content may be edited for style and length.

Journal Reference:

Qiaomei Fu, Cosimo Posth, Mateja Hajdinjak, Martin Petr, Swapan Mallick, Daniel Fernandes, Anja Furtwängler, Wolfgang Haak, Matthias Meyer, Alissa Mittnik, Birgit Nickel, Alexander Peltzer, Nadin Rohland, Viviane Slon, Sahra Talamo, Iosif Lazaridis, Mark Lipson, Iain Mathieson, Stephan Schiffels, Pontus Skoglund, Anatoly P. Derevianko, Nikolai Drozdov, Vyacheslav Slavinsky, Alexander Tsybankov, Renata Grifoni Cremonesi, Francesco Mallegni, Bernard Gély, Eligio Vacca, Manuel R. González Morales, Lawrence G. Straus, Christine Neugebauer-Maresch, Maria Teschler-Nicola, Silviu Constantin, Oana Teodora Moldovan, Stefano Benazzi, Marco Peresani, Donato Coppola, Martina Lari, Stefano Ricci, Annamaria Ronchitelli, Frédérique Valentin, Corinne Thevenet, Kurt Wehrberger, Dan Grigorescu, Hélène Rougier, Isabelle Crevecoeur, Damien Flas, Patrick Semal, Marcello A. Mannino, Christophe Cupillard, Hervé Bocherens, Nicholas J. Conard, Katerina Harvati, Vyacheslav Moiseyev, Dorothée G. Drucker, Jiří Svoboda, Michael P. Richards, David Caramelli, Ron Pinhasi, Janet Kelso, Nick Patterson, Johannes Krause, Svante Pääbo, David Reich.

 The genetic history of Ice Age EuropeNature, 2016; DOI: 10.1038/nature17993


CIA Whistleblower Speaks Out About Climate Engineering, Vaccination Dangers, and 911

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nl5NW9KcMt0

Dane Wigington

Published on Oct 10, 2016

http://GeoengineeringWatch.org

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 GeoengineeringWatch.org Kevin Shipp was a decorated CIA officer who refused to look the other way in regard to government criminality and cover-up. At a very important public awareness event that was recently held in Northern California, Mr. Shipp gave an extremely informative and compelling presentation on numerous horrific ongoing government crimes. The subjects Kevin Shipp addressed included climate engineering, the 911 false flag inside job, vaccination dangers/cover-up, and the governments total persecution of anyone who dares to tell the truth about rampant government tyranny. The paradigm we have all known has been built on deception and the dark agendas of the global power structure. The courage Kevin Shipp has shown by doing his best to expose government criminality and tyranny serves as a stellar example to all of us. We desperately need other individuals in government agencies and the US military to follow Kevin's lead . If we have any chance of stopping the completely out of control criminal cabal that currently runs our country and much of the world, we must all make our voices heard, we must all join the battle for the greater good. Dane Wigington To support GeoengineeringWatch.org: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/su... To receive Geoengineering Watch updates, please sign up for our mailing list: https://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/n... The latest and most effective GeoengineeringWatch.org awareness raising materials can be found at the links below: 2 sided color glossy informational flyers: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/ads/ 20 page fact and photo summary booklets: http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org/cl... To follow us on Facebook, click here: https://www.facebook.com/dane.wigingt... To follow the latest GeoengineeringWatch.org videos please subscribe to our four youtube channels below: Dane Wigington https://www.youtube.com/c/DaneWigington Geoengineering Watch https://www.youtube.com/c/Geoengineer... GeoengineeringWatch.org https://www.youtube.com/c/Geoengineer... Geo Watch https://www.youtube.com/c/GeoWatch




The Kealy Paper written by Glen Kealy
North American Sellouts are Freemasons

Look up the meaning of the Word Persia in the dictionary

Red Asian

Peresians

per means red/fire

Persians were made up of four separate groups from
Afghanistan Iraq, Iran and Median

The Persians are an Iranian ethnic group that make up over half the population of Iran

    They share a common cultural system and are native speakers of the Persian language,  as well as closely related languages.

   The ancient Persians were a nomadic branch of the ancient Iranian population that entered the territory of modern-day Iran 

    by the early 10th century BC.. Together with their compatriot allies,

    they established and ruled some of the world's most powerful empires,

     well-recognized for their massive cultural, political, and social influence covering much of the territory and population of the ancient world.  

      Throughout history, the Persians have contributed greatly to various forms of art and science,

       and own one of the world's most prominent literatures.

       In contemporary terminology, people of Persian heritage native specifically to present-day AfghanistanTajikistan, and Uzbekistan 

       are referred to as Tajiks, whereas those in the eastern Caucasus (primarily the present-day Republic of Azerbaijan), 

       albeit heavily assimilated, are referred to as TatsHowever, historically, the terms TajikTat, and Persian 

        were synonymous and were used interchangeably, and many of the most influential Persian figures hailed from 

      outside Iran's present-day borders to the northeast in Central Asia and Afghanistan and to a lesser extent to

      the northwest in the Caucasus proper.

      IRAC (/ˈaɪræk/ EYE-rak) is an acronym that generally stands for: Issue, Rule, Application, and Conclusion. 

      It functions as a methodology for legal analysis. 

     The IRAC format is mostly used in hypothetical questions in law school and bar exams.
      The Word Irac can be written also as Iraq.


       The words Medicine and Media come from the name of the country of Median
    

     The word Medi -cine
     is made up of Medi and Cine
   being medi  that will transform and change the body
   and
    being Cine that will transform and change the brain/mind

    This group of people would make an arrangement with a group of people in Italy with a group of people in China 

     to obtain high level technology from India and China

    The world Europe  stands for EU Rope

      It was decided to for a place called The College Of Six Days..

        a place on the planet where space travel will eventually will be developed

       which was created in an area which lies between two boundaries between Mexico in the south and Canada in the North...

      called the USA

      SUSA was the capital of media

     USA was set up to go into the outer parts of space.... and given all the technology from China, India

   To eventually to be able to reach The OORT Cloud

     USA Launched rockets that will enter the OORT Cloud which is the home of comets which hold chemicals and magitismns

   that will be bale to changing life ...

   

   List of missions to comets - Wikipedia

     https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_missions_to_comets

 

     As of 2013, the United States, Soviet Union, Japan and the European Space Agency have conducted   missions to comets.                 Spacecraft, Launch Date, Operator, Comet, Mission, Outcome, Remarks,  

          Carrier rocket ... 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko, Orbiter, Successful, Entered orbit around 67P at                 

     09:06 UTC on 6 August 2014.

    The  year 2008 makes the beginning of the end of this new beginning

     American has completed its task


100 Best Things to do in Ireland

by Jen Miller

Jen Reviews

https://www.jenreviews.com/best-things-to-do-in-ireland/

Often referred to as the “Emerald Isle”, Ireland is a place of renowned natural beauty, with a rich, diverse history that can be discovered through its many ancient castles, historic towns and sea-side villages. Expect a warm welcome from the locals - whose legendary hospitality, traditional music and famous beer make this one of the most charming islands in the world. 

Contents

  • 1. Cliffs of Moher (Liscannor)
  • 2. The Book of Kells at Trinity College (Dublin)
  • 3. Wild Atlantic Way (Galway)
  • 4. The Burren (County Clare)
  • 5. Guinness Storehouse (Dublin)
  • 6. Glenveagh National Park (County Donegal)
  • 7. The Blarney Stone at Blarney Castle & Gardens (Blarney)
  • 8. Grafton Street (Dublin)
  • 9. Killarney National Park (County Kerry)
  • 10. Glendalough (County Wicklow)
  • 11. Johnnie Fox's (Dublin)
  • 12. Muckross House & Gardens (County Kerry)
  • 13. Kilmainham Gaol (Dublin)
  • 14. Ring of Kerry (County Kerry)
  • 15. Rock of Cashel (County Tipperary)
  • 16. Castletown House (County Kildare)
  • 17. Brittas Bay (County Wicklow)
  • 18. Portmarnock Golf Club (Dublin)
  • 19. Garinish Island (Bantry Bay)
  • 20. Slieve League (Carrick)
  • 21. National Botanic Gardens (Dublin)
  • 22. Aran Islands (Galway)
  • 23. Sugarloaf Mountain (Dublin)
  • 24. Bunratty Castle (County Clare)
  • 25. Brú Na Bóinne (County Meath)
  • 26. Shop Street (Galway)
  • 27. Gap of Dunloe (Killarney)
  • 28. St Patrick's Cathedral (Dublin)
  • 29. Drombeg Stone Circle (County Cork)
  • 30. Knocknarea Mountain (County Sligo)
  • 31. Dun Aonghasa (Inishmore)
  • 32. King John's Castle (Limerick)
  • 33. Charles Fort (Cork)
  • 34. Newgrange (County Meath)
  • 35. O’Donoghue’s Bar (Dublin)
  • 36. National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology (Dublin)
  • 37. Dunbrody Abbey (County Wexford)
  • 38. Copper Coast Geopark (County Waterford)
  • 39. Eask Tower (County Kerry)
  • 40. Spike Island (County Cork)
  • 41. Dublin Castle (Dublin)
  • 42. The Dingle Peninsula (County Kerry)
  • 43. The English Market (Cork)
  • 44. The Little Museum of Dublin (Dublin)
  • 45. Mount Usher Gardens (County Wicklow)
  • 46. Galway Cathedral (Galway)
  • 47. Kells Priory (County Kilkenny)
  • 48. Fota Wildlife Park (County Cork)
  • 49. Gallarus Oratory (County Kerry)
  • 50. Ardmore (County Waterford)
  • 51. Atlantic Drive on Achill Island (Westport)
  • 52. Sky Road (Clifden)
  • 53. Ailladie (County Clare)
  • 54. Dunmore Cave (County Kilkenny)
  • 55. Barryscourt Castle (County Cork)
  • 56. Dingle Harbour (County Kerry)
  • 57. Ballyhoura Mountains (Limerick)
  • 58. Uragh Stone Circle (County Kerry)
  • 59. Phoenix Park and Dublin Zoo (Dublin)
  • 60. Dingle Distillery (County Kerry)
  • 61. Valentia Island (County Kerry)
  • 62. Carrowmore (County Sligo)
  • 63. Coral Beach (Galway)
  • 64. Cooley Peninsula (County Louth)
  • 65. Dingle Peninsula (County Kerry)
  • 66. Zipit Tibradden Wood (Dublin)
  • 67. Mizen Head (County Cork)
  • 68. Donegal County Museum (County Donegal)
  • 69. Dublin Writers Museum (Dublin)
  • 70. County Carlow Military Museum (Carlow)
  • 71. Cratloe Woods (County Clare)
  • 72. Malahide Castle & Gardens (Dublin)
  • 73. Dunguaire Castle (Galway)
  • 74. Cork City Gaol (Cork)
  • 75. Lough Gur (County Limerick)
  • 76. Jerpoint Abbey (County Kilkenny)
  • 77. Cobh Heritage Centre (County Cork)
  • 78. Clara Bog (County Offaly)
  • 79. The Rock of Dunamase (County Laois)
  • 80. The Donkey Sanctuary (County Cork)
  • 81. Powerscourt Estate (County Wicklow)
  • 82. Áras an Uachtaráin (Dublin)
  • 83. Saltee Islands (County Wexford)
  • 84. Emo Court (County Laois)
  • 85. The Brazen Head (Dublin)
  • 86. Night Kayaking (County Cork)
  • 87. Dunsany Castle (County Meath)
  • 88. Burrishoole Abbey (County Mayo)
  • 89. Creevykeel Court Cairn (Sligo)
  • 90. Glasnevin Cemetery (Dublin)
  • 91. Old Jameson Distillery (Dublin)
  • 92. Kilmurvey Beach (County Galway)
  • 93. Blennerville Windmill (County Kerry)
  • 94. St. Michan's Church (Dublin)
  • 95. Moneygall Village (County Offaly)
  • 96. Knockma Woods (County Galway)
  • 97. The Irish Sky Garden (County Cork)
  • 98. The Hole of the Sorrows (County Clare)
  • 99. Lambay Island (Dublin)
  • 100. Burkes Beach Riding (Killarney)

1. Cliffs of Moher (Liscannor)

With over 1 million visitors a year, the spectacular Cliffs of Moher are one of Ireland’s most famous natural beauties - rising dramatically to 120m above the Atlantic Ocean. On a clear day, visitors are rewarded with stunning views as far as the Aran Islands in Galway Bay and the Maum Turk Mountains in Connemara.

Wildlife is abundant here and you can find Ireland’s only mainland breeding colony of Atlantic Puffins. Take a 1-hour cruise to see these incredible birds up close, along with Razorbills, Kittiwakes and Choughs.

2. The Book of Kells at Trinity College (Dublin)

Ireland’s most prized national treasure, The Book of Kells is a beautifully illustrated gospel book containing four of the New Testament gospels in Latin. Dating back to around 800 AD, The Book of Kells can be seen on display in the grand Old Library of Trinity College, in the heart of Dublin.

Take the official 30-minute tour to learn about the fascinating five hundred year history of the building, delivered by students of the college.

3. Wild Atlantic Way (Galway)

Wild rugged seascapes, winding cliff-side roads, ancient castles and fairy lore - Ireland’s Wild Atlantic Way epitomises the spirit of the Emerald Isle whether you drive, cycle or hike its 2,500km of coastal road. As the longest defined coastal touring route in the world, the Wild Atlantic Way stretches from Londonderry Derry in the north, all the way to Kinsale in the south, with many different itineraries to choose from. Plan your own epic route, or follow one of the three or four-day guides from the official website.


4. The Burren (County Clare)

One of Ireland’s six national parks and encompassing around 250 square kilometres, The Burren in County Clare is home to spectacular rock formations, cliffs, caves and fascinating archeological sites - with over 2500 recorded monuments. Book a one-day hiking tour of the park’s most famous peak - Mullaghmore Mountain - to discover the unique flora and fauna native to The Burren.

5. Guinness Storehouse (Dublin)

Discover the history behind Ireland’s most famous beer - Guinness - at the St. James’s Gate Brewery in the heart of Dublin. From the life of founder Arthur Guinness to the ingredients that make a pint of the “black stuff” popular all over the world, a trip to the Storehouse is an essential part of a trip to the capital city. Skip the queues by joining a 75-minute connoisseur tasting session, which ends in the famous 7th floor Gravity Bar - where you can enjoy 360 degree views of Dublin.

6. Glenveagh National Park (County Donegal)

Centred around the impressive 19th century Glenveagh Castle, the Glenveagh National Park is the second largest in the country, stretching over 16,000 acres. With a wealth of wildlife - including red deer - the park’s many walks, hikes and gardens showcase natural Ireland at its very best. Be sure to bring along a good hiking backpack!

Book a 30 minute castle tour to hear the history of the house and the exotic walled gardens in the grounds.

7. The Blarney Stone at Blarney Castle & Gardens (Blarney)

Visit Blarney Castle and kiss the famous Blarney Stone, which is said to give those - who brave the slight vertigo-inducing position required in order to place your lips upon it - the gift of eloquence, or as they say in Ireland, the “gift of the gab”.

Opinion varies on the exact story behind the myth of the stone - with some saying that it was a gift to the Irish from Scotland in return for sending men to help King Robert the Bruce defeat the English during the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, while others claim it was brought back to Ireland during the Crusades. Whatever the history behind the legend, famous faces from all over the world have made the journey to kiss the stone - including Winston Churchill and Mick Jagger.

Book a one day tour to discover the fascinating history behind the castle, gardens and the stone.

8. Grafton Street (Dublin)

Indulge in a little sightseeing and shopping on Dublin’s most famous street. Grafton Street not only features world-famous shops but also historical building and beautiful architecture. Now a popular spot for street performers, musicians and entertainers, examples of Grafton Street’s traditional businesses can still be found in between the high street names - including the famous Bewley’s Grafton Street Café.

Pick up a free Dublin Street map from the tourist office on Grafton Street, where the friendly staff offer advice and tips on the best hidden destinations.

9. Killarney National Park (County Kerry)

Rugged mountains that sweep to sparkling lakes, woodlands packed with an abundance of wildlife and hiking trails which lead to hidden waterfalls - Killarney National Park is an area of outstanding natural beauty. Featuring the highest mountain rage in Ireland - McGillycuddy's Reeks - and the 15th Ross Castle, the National Park is best explored by foot. The Muckross Lake Loop, which includes the impressive Torc waterfall, takes roughly 3 - 5 hours following the official trail.

10. Glendalough (County Wicklow)

Stunning scenery and fascinating history awaits at Glendalough - one of Ireland’s most beautiful locations. Home to the Monastic Site with Round Tower, the “Valley of the Two Lakes” has several challenging walks and trails for the more adventurous traveller. Join a 6-day guided walking tour to experience everything this incredible area has to offer.

11. Johnnie Fox's (Dublin)

Experience a true Irish pub atmosphere at Johnnie Fox's, one of the oldest pubs in Ireland. Established in 1798, the pub is famous for its traditional music sessions, storytellers, house bands, dancers and award-winning seafood kitchen. The pub is only about 30 minutes away from Dublin city centre.

12. Muckross House & Gardens (County Kerry)

The 19th century Muckross House stands on the banks of the beautiful Muckross Lake, Killarney. Visited by Queen Victoria in 1861, the house and its surrounding gardens are exceptionally well kept, but it’s the traditional farms dotted around the estate that make this a truly unique experience - transporting visitors back to rural Ireland in the 1930’s and 40’s. Take a tour of the house and then follow the map of the traditional farms to experience life in the early 20th century.

13. Kilmainham Gaol (Dublin)

Now a busy museum, the former prison of Kilmainham Gaol in Dublin offers a fascinating look at the history of some of Ireland’s most famous revolutionaries - including the leaders of the Easter Risings. Book a 90-minute guided tour in advance to beat the crowds and experience what life was like behind bars for the prisoners held, and later executed, here.

14. Ring of Kerry (County Kerry)

The Iveragh Peninsula - more commonly referred to as the Ring of Kerry - is a tourist trail in County Kerry that features some of the finest driving scenery in Ireland, incredible beaches and ancient monuments. Visitors can also experience the breathtaking views by canoe or kayak - joining one of the exciting water day tours that set off from Killarney.

15. Rock of Cashel (County Tipperary)

Holding one of the finest collections of Celtic art in Europe, the historic site at the Rock of Cashel was the former seat of the old kings of Munster - whose ancestors later handed the main fortress over to the church. There are several ancient buildings to explore, including the Romanesque chapel - said to be the best example in Ireland. Book ahead to guarantee a place on one of the 45-minute tours, ending with the stunning view of Tipperary from the rock.

16. Castletown House (County Kildare)

The largest and most impressive example of Palladian-style houses in Ireland, Castletown was once the home of the Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. The famous palace-like building was carefully restored and opened to the public in 1967, showcasing exquisite furniture, decor and artworks from the previous owners. Join one of the free 45-minute tours to learn about the history of the house and the families that once lived here.

17. Brittas Bay (County Wicklow)

Considered the finest beach on Ireland’s east coast, Brittas Bay in County Wicklow is a gorgeous 2 mile stretch of powdery sand, backed by large sand dunes. Home to an array of wildlife, the beach and dunes are a favourite of nearby Dubliners during the summer months. Surfers can enjoy the Irish Sea waves, or beginners can take a morning surf lesson with the local training school.

18. Portmarnock Golf Club (Dublin)

Considered the best golf course in Ireland, and often included in round-ups of the best courses in the world, Portmarnock Golf Club has a stunning scenically setting on the east coast, just 10 miles north of Dublin.

Try your hand on the link’s 27 holes - including the famous 15th hole - before relaxing in the historic club house.

19. Garinish Island (Bantry Bay)

Explore the beautiful gardens of Garnish (or Garinish) Island in Glengarriff Harbour, Bantry Bay. Take the 30-minute ferry from Glengarriff Pier and walk amongst the unusual plants to discover what makes these picturesque gardens world famous. Don’t forget to visit the Martello tower on the south of the island for a breathtaking view over Bantry Bay.

20. Slieve League (Carrick)

Three times higher than the peaks of the Cliffs of Moher, the mountain of Slieve League in County Donegal offers incredible walks and views - including the famous "One Man's Path" track. Take a one-day “Highlander Tour” to experience the outstanding beauty of this area with a safe and trained guide.

21. National Botanic Gardens (Dublin)

One of Dublin’s most popular free attractions, the beautiful Botanic Gardens are a place of peace and tranquility, set in a spectacular glass building. Home to over 20,000 types of living plants, with many more dried specimens, the garden is a horticulturalist dream. Download one of the free audio tours as your companion while you wander amongst the rare plants.

22. Aran Islands (Galway)

The three islands of Inis Mor, Inis Meain and Inis Oirr make up the Wild Atlantic Way’s spectacular Aran Islands - one of Ireland’s most unspoiled destinations. Similar to the landscape of the Burren, the limestone islands offer endless activities for adventure seekers but the best way to explore is by bike. Rent a mountain bike and cycle the 1 hour loop to the prehistoric hill fort of Dun Aonghasa.

23. Sugarloaf Mountain (Dublin)

Dominating the skyline, the Sugarloaf Mountain was once used as a milepost for pilgrims making their way to the monastery at Glendalough. In present times, the mountain is a popular hiking spot, with an easy 1-hour hike to the top, providing stunning views of the surrounding landscape.

24. Bunratty Castle (County Clare)

Travel back in time to the 15th and 19th centuries at Bunratty Castle and Folk Park - Ireland’s most authentic medieval castle. Take a stroll around the charming village in the park, wander the colourful gardens or join one of the daily tours of the castle to find out more about the lives of the people who lived and worked here.

25. Brú Na Bóinne (County Meath)

One of the world’s most important historic sites, Brú na Bóinne contains three passage tombs - Knowth, Newgrange and Dowth. In addition to the tombs, almost 100 other monuments have been recorded in the area, as well as some of the finest examples of megalithic art in Europe. Jump on a day-tour from Dublin to see the best of Newgrange and Knowth, and discover the Hill of Tara and the exhibitions of the visitor centre too.

26. Shop Street (Galway)

Galway’s main shopping street is packed full of stores, pubs and high-street names, housed in a range of historic buildings including Lynch’s Castle - now a branch of the Allied Irish Banks. More of a townhouse than a traditional castle, the building still features an interesting and somewhat grim history - being the spot where the Lord Mayor had his own son hung for violating the law. Join one of the 90-minute walking city tours to discover the secrets of this old-world street.

27. Gap of Dunloe (Killarney)

Explore the stunning scenery of the narrow mountain pass of Dunloe in Killarney. This has been one of the most popular visitor spots in Ireland for decades, and with the option to see the gap by horse-drawn carriage, boat or horseback, you’ll feel like you’ve stepped back in time. Book a four-hour boat and pony tour to see the best of the lakes and the gap.

28. St Patrick's Cathedral (Dublin)

The National Cathedral of Ireland, St Patrick’s in Dublin has been a holy site for over 1500 years. Gulliver’s Travels author Jonathan Swift, who was Dean of the Cathedral in the 1700’s, is buried here – alongside notable churchmen and soldiers. Join one of the 2.5 hour guided tours of the Cathedral to learn about the history of Ireland’s most famous Saint and the building that bears his name.

29. Drombeg Stone Circle (County Cork)

Just east of Glandore in County Cork, the Drombeg Stone Circle is the most famous megalithic site in Ireland. Known by the locals as the “Druid's Altar”, 17 of the recumbent stones survive - reaching up to 2-metres high. Learn the history of the pagan rituals and how the stone age people survived on a one day tour of County Cork.

30. Knocknarea Mountain (County Sligo)

County Sligo’s striking mountain offers excellent hiking and, although not confirmed through excavation, is believed to hold the Neolithic passage tomb of Queen Maeve of Connacht within its mound, thought to date back to around 3000 BC. The one-hour hike to the top is steep, but rewards climbers with wonderful views of the the Ox Mountains.

31. Dun Aonghasa (Inishmore)


One of several ancient hill forts on the Aran Islands in County Galway, Dun Aonghasa is generally considered to be an excellent example of barbaric monuments in Europe. Perched on the cliff edge of Inishmore, the site also offers spectacular views of the entire island. Hop on a one day Aran Bus tour to see the best of this 14 acre site.

32. King John's Castle (Limerick)

Situated on the “King’s Island” on the River Shannon in Limerick, King John’s Castle has over 800 years of fascinating history to discover. After a multi-million euro investment was completed in 2013, the castle now features interactive activities and exhibitions - including a blacksmith's forge and a medieval campaign tent in the courtyard. Book your admission ticket in advance to spend a day exploring Ireland’s most famous castle.

33. Charles Fort (Cork)

Over 300 years old, the star-shaped Charles Fort is associated with some of the most important moments in Ireland’s history, including the Irish Civil War and the Williamite War. Created during the reign of King Charles II, the fort occupies more than 20 acres and is best seen as part of a one day tour of Cork.

34. Newgrange (County Meath)

Considered the “Jewel of Ireland’s ancient East”, Newgrange is a world-famous 5200 year-old passage tomb in County Meath, north of Dublin. A World Heritage Site, Newgrange reaches

85m in diameter and 13.5m in height and is surrounded by 97 kerbstones - some of which feature incredibly well-preserved examples of megalithic engravings. Visit the The Brú na Bóinne Visitor Centre to secure a place on one of the 2-hour guided toursthat leave at regular intervals.

35. O’Donoghue’s Bar (Dublin)

Famous for being the starting point for popular Irish band The Dubliners, O’Donoghue’s Bar has a long and closely-connecting history with traditional Irish music. Well known faces of those who have played the venue cover the walls and the bar is still one of the best places to catch live sessions in the city. Visit at 9pm on weekdays or 5pm on a Saturday to hear the next big thing in Irish music.

36. National Museum of Ireland – Archaeology (Dublin)

Covering Ireland’s varied and fascinating history from the Stone to Middle Ages, the National Museum of Ireland has a range of permanent and visiting exhibitions - from ancient Irish artefacts to Bronze Age gold. The museum takes roughly one hour to visit and is best seen by following the official downloadable floorplan.

37. Dunbrody Abbey (County Wexford)

At 59m, Dunbrody Abbey is one of the longest churches in Ireland, having been built in the 13th century. It is also one of the only churches to feature a full-sized hedge maze - featuring over 1500 yew trees and pebble paths. A one-hour guided tour of the Abbey and the maze can be booked in advance or visitors are given a self-guide sheet on arrival.

38. Copper Coast Geopark (County Waterford)

Declared a European Geopark in 2001 and a UNESCO Global Geopark in 2004, Ireland’s Copper Coast is an area of outstanding natural beauty - with secret beaches and hidden coves stretching over Ireland’s southern coast in County Waterford. Request a self-tour map of the coastal route or download one of the walking trail cards to experience the best of the region.

39. Eask Tower (County Kerry)

Built in the 1840’s to guide ships into Dingle Harbour, Eask Tower is made of solid stone and sits on top of Carhoo Hill - where it stands at 600 ft above sea level. The tower was later used as a look-out post during World War II. Start from Dingle and walk the 8-mile return route for incredible views from the top.

40. Spike Island (County Cork)

Home to Fort Mitchell - a star-shaped military fort dating back to the 18th century - Spike Island lies within Cork Harbour and covers 103 acres. Used as both a defence location, as well as a prison, Spike Island was originally home to an early monastic settlement. Take the short scenic ferry from Kennedy Pier in Cobh and spend two hours touring the island.

41. Dublin Castle (Dublin)

With a complex history dating back to as early as 930, Dublin Castle has long been the centre point of the city. It was the Vikings who originally built a fortification here - taken over by the Normans during the invasion, although it was the English who built the first elements of a traditional castle. Wander around the grounds for free or book a paid-for two-hour guided tour of the State Apartments and Chapel Royal.

42. The Dingle Peninsula (County Kerry)

Stretching for over 30 miles, the Dingle Peninsula is home to a range of outdoor activities and stunning coastal scenery. Explore Mount Brandon - Ireland’s second highest mountain - and take in the view of the uninhabited Blasket Islands to the West. Take a one hour boat tour to meet area’s most popular resident - Fungie the Dingle Dolphin.

43. The English Market (Cork)

Considered one of the best covered markets in Europe, and visited by Queen Elizabeth during her 2011 State trip, the English Market in the centre of Cork has become an increasingly popular tourist destination. Built in the mid-19th century, the market is now a multicultural hub for foodies, but is still most famous for its traditional butchers and fishmongers.

44. The Little Museum of Dublin (Dublin)

Join one of the popular 30 minute tours of Dublin’s newest and most compact museum - The Little Museum of Dublin. Featuring a collection created entirely by public donation, the museum offers an intriguing look into life in the capital over the past 100 years.

45. Mount Usher Gardens (County Wicklow)

An excellent example of Robinsonian-style garden design, Mount Usher is home to one of Ireland’s finest collections of trees, shrubs and flowers. A 90-minute tour by one of the garden’s expert guides is the best way to discover the unmissable sights during each different season.

46. Galway Cathedral (Galway)

The newest of the great cathedrals of Europe, The Cathedral of Our Lady Assumed into Heaven and St Nicholas - most commonly referred to as simply Galway Cathedral - is the largest building in the city. Constructed on the site of an old prison, the Cathedral is now a popular tourist destination and visitors can join one of the all-day hop-on, hop-off historic tours to view this and many more of Galway’s top sites.

47. Kells Priory (County Kilkenny)

The impressive Kells Priory is one of the biggest and best examples of medieval structures in Ireland. Founded in 1193, the Priory has suffered much over the years - including fires that destroyed much of the original buildings on three different occasions. Book an afternoon tour to climb the tower - be warned, the stairs are not for the faint of heart!

48. Fota Wildlife Park (County Cork)

Spread over 100 acres, just outside of the city of Cork, Fota Wildlife Park is the second most popular attraction in Ireland - drawing just under 500,000 visitors each year. From the most recent additions to the Fota family - Asian lions - to the many other breeds of animals and plants, the wildlife park is the perfect day trips for families. Download the Fota Wildlife Park Map for free before you visit or for a more hands-on experience, join a behind the scenes day-trip.

49. Gallarus Oratory (County Kerry)

Still in near perfect condition, the stone, upside-down boat structure of Gallarus Oratory was a place of early Christian worship by local farmers and is believed to have been built sometime around the 6th century. It’s status as a holy place is known throughout the world. Book a place on the popular Archaeological Day Tour to see this and other nearby monuments.

50. Ardmore (County Waterford)

The picturesque seaside town of Ardmore in County Waterford is the perfect place to indulge in outdoor activities. Take a hike along the cliffs, learn to surf on beautiful Ballyquin Beach or try out a stand up paddle board at the activity centre.

51. Atlantic Drive on Achill Island (Westport)

Stretching for approximately 80 miles of the County Mayo coastline, the Atlantic Drive is a stunning route, best seen by car or bike but the area also offers a fantastic range of water activities - including scuba diving. Learn to dive in one day with a Discover Scuba course

52. Sky Road (Clifden)

Winding up amongst the hills of Clifden Bay, the Sky Road is famous for its jaw-dropping views of the sea and the islands of Turbot and Inishturk. Cycling the 17km loop from Clifden is one of the best ways to experience all that this fascinating region has to offer.

53. Ailladie (County Clare)

One of the most popular rock climbing locations in Ireland, Ailladie on the coast of The Burren in County Clare has roughly 170 climb routes - ranging from 8m to 30m. The climbing is considered relatively difficult but learners can start with a Climbing Hidden Tour.

54. Dunmore Cave (County Kilkenny)

Known as the spot of a viking massacre in 928 A.D, Dunmore Cave is a fascinating series of underground chambers where visitors can discover the finest calcite formations in all of Ireland. Spend one-hour exploring this world beneath the ground.

55. Barryscourt Castle (County Cork)

The 14th century Barryscourt Castle is an excellent example of a traditional Irish tower house and is one of the most popular visitor spots in County Cork. Explore the beautiful Tower House Gardens - designed and laid out as they would have originally been. Join one of the free hourly tours to learn about the history of the historic Barry family home.

56. Dingle Harbour (County Kerry)

The charming Dingle Harbour is the perfect place to explore the surrounding coastline and history of the town - having once been a major port during the late 13th century. These days, boat trips depart daily and you can discover the local history on one of the day tours that leave at regular intervals from the harbour.

57. Ballyhoura Mountains (Limerick)

Crossing both the borders of County Cork and County Limerick, the Ballyhoura Mountains offer thrill-seekers some of the best mountain bike trails in the entire country. There are just under 100km of trails to discover, from easy 6km routes to 50km Castlepook loop.

58. Uragh Stone Circle (County Kerry)

Smaller in size than some of Ireland’s other megalithic monuments but positioned beautifully overlooking Lough Cloonee Upper and Lough Inchiquin, the stone circle at Uragh is part of the stunning Gleninchaquin Park. There are many spectacular walks and hikes within the park, including the short mapped trek to the Stones.

59. Phoenix Park and Dublin Zoo (Dublin)

One of the most popular tourist sites in Dublin, Phoenix Park and Dublin Zoo make for an amazing day out for all the family. With an array of wild animals and a focus on learning, visitors to the zoo can book a private guided day tour to discover everything that happens behind the scenes.

60. Dingle Distillery (County Kerry)

Producing unique, artisan whiskey, vodka and gin, the Dingle Distillery has been offering customers independent distilling since 2012. Get a behind the scenes look at how the distillery works on a one-hour tour - where you’ll also be invited to taste some of the drinks.

61. Valentia Island (County Kerry)

At only 7 miles long by 2 miles wide, Valentia is a small island and one of the most westernly points in Ireland. With just 600 inhabitants, it’s a charming and peaceful place to explore - especially by bike. Hire one for the day from Kerry, cycle over the bridge and be rewarded with breathtaking views.

62. Carrowmore (County Sligo)

As one of the four main passage tombs in Ireland, the Carrowmore Megalithic Complex is a popular spot for tourists visiting County Sligo. Join a seven-day tour of Ireland’s most ancient mystical locations to see the tomb and many of the other surrounding sites.

63. Coral Beach (Galway)

Famous for its fine coral, the Blue Flag 2014 Coral Beach is a place of unspoilt natural beauty on the Galway coast, near the village of Carraroe. Perfect for swimming and snorkelling, it is also possible to charter a yacht for the day to explore the local coastline.

64. Cooley Peninsula (County Louth)

A hilly green peninsula in County Louth, the Cooley area is known for its excellent range of outdoor activities - from horse riding through lush glens to hiking amongst ancient Irish monuments. Make like the locals and spend an afternoon with a fishing rod on the calm waters of Carlingford Lough.

65. Dingle Peninsula (County Kerry)

An outdoor lover’s paradise, the Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry ends just beyond the town of Dingle and is thought to be the most westernly point in, not just Ireland, but Europe. Explore the Cú Chulainn trail by horseback on a 1.5 hour trek and be rewarded with stunning views.

66. Zipit Tibradden Wood (Dublin)

Located in Dublin’s Tibradden Wood, Ireland’s second Zipit course allows visitors to swing through the trees and offers incredible views of the city beyond. Enjoy an afternoon spent exploring one of several different routes within the forest, or for those who prefer to keep their feet on the ground, the wood has many enchanting walks.

67. Mizen Head (County Cork)

One of the most popular points on the Wild Atlantic Way, the iconic bridge at Mizen Head allows visitors to cross the gorge below and spot wildlife including seals, whales and dolphins. Follow the route on the Wild Atlantic Way map and visit the old signal station to get a glimpse into the solitary life of the lighthouse keepers of old.

68. Donegal County Museum (County Donegal)

Located in an architecturally beautiful building, the Donegal County Museum was once part of a workhouse, but now showcases a wide collection of artefacts from County Donegal through the ages - particularly from World War I. Book a place on a two-hour bus tour of Donegal to see the Museum and the town’s other places of note.

69. Dublin Writers Museum (Dublin)

Showcasing the works of some of Ireland’s most well known and loved writers, the Dublin Writers Museum can be found in a stunning 18th century mansion. From Yeats to Wilde and Joyce - every important name in Irish literature is here. Time your visit to coincide with the lunchtime theatre and reading events.

70. County Carlow Military Museum (Carlow)

Beginning with a small memorial after the death of a soldier in the town, the County Carlow Military Museum now holds a large collection of military memorabilia - including a large portion of objects handed over by the Irish Defence Forces. Free short tours run regularly and offer insight and personal stories on Carlow’s past.

71. Cratloe Woods (County Clare)

Believed to be the origin of the wooden roof beams found in Westminster Hall, Cratloe Woods are a lovely State-owned forest next to the small village of Cratloe. Follow the one-hour trail loop to see enchanting trees, birds and more.

72. Malahide Castle & Gardens (Dublin)

The beautiful walled gardens of Malahide alone are reason enough to visit the castle - containing over 5000 different species plants. Inside, discover the history of the Talbot family, dating back to as early as 1175, through one of the expert 45-minute tours of the castle.

73. Dunguaire Castle (Galway)

A simple but beautifully positioned structure, on the edge of the water in Galway Bay, the 16th century Dunguaire Castle has been restored to give visitors an idea of what life would have looked like in olden times. For a special treat, book a place at one of the special banquet meals that run from April to October - where you can enjoy live entertainment and local produce.

74. Cork City Gaol (Cork)

If you want to get a real feel for what life was like for Irish prisoners at the beginning of last century, take a trip to the imposing Cork City Gaol. You can wander down the halls and explore the former cells throughout the day, or for those who like a scare, book a private one-hour evening tour to meet the ghosts of the Gaol.

75. Lough Gur (County Limerick)

The horseshoe-shaped lake of Lough Gur has played a crucial role in the lives of the Irish who have lived near its banks for thousands of years. Over 6000 years of archaeology and history have been discovered here and with many walking routes to choose from, join one of the expert-guided walking tours which set off at 11am on Sundays.

76. Jerpoint Abbey (County Kilkenny)

Declared a National Monument, the 12th century, Cistercian, Jerpoint Abbey is a fine example of Romanesque ruins. Guided afternoon tours are by advance booking only but include a fascinating look at the history of the church and the surrounding Jerpoint Town ruins.

77. Cobh Heritage Centre (County Cork)

Located in a beautifully restored Victorian railway station building, the Cobh Heritage Centre gives an insightful look into the lives of the Irish immigrants who travelled by sea to reach faraway lands and start new lives abroad. Visitors can also trace their own family history during their trip to find out if they have Irish roots.

78. Clara Bog (County Offaly)

Clara Bog is one of the largest raised bogs in Ireland and one of the best examples or remaining bogs in Europe. The area is home to many wild animals and birds, which can be seen on one of the private guided tours of the bog or discovered at the Clara Bog Visitor Centre.

79. The Rock of Dunamase (County Laois)

Offering spectacular views of the surrounding countryside, the Rock of Dunamase is an imposing rocky outcrop that has played an important role in the history of the County Laois area for hundreds of years. It’s an easy hike from the car park to the Rock, follow the information board at the bottom of the hill.

80. The Donkey Sanctuary (County Cork)

Animal lovers can spend the day visiting, learning and helping out with the donkeys that stay at Cork’s Donkey Sanctuary and throughout the country in the sanctuary’s rehoming program. It’s free to visit and walk around the sanctuary, or alternatively, you can adopt a donkey during your trip.

81. Powerscourt Estate (County Wicklow)

Voted National Geographic’s No.3 Garden in the World, Powerscourt Estate in County Wicklow stretched for over 43 acres and includes the beautiful Powerscourt Waterfall. A short 6km drive from the entrance to the Estate, the waterfall is Ireland’s highest at 121m.

82. Áras an Uachtaráin (Dublin)

The official residence of the President, Áras an Uachtaráin is also used as a venue for State occasions and has welcomed people including the Obamas and Nelson Mandela in the past. Visitors can purchase tickets for a one hour tour of the main reception rooms, based on a first come first served basis.

83. Saltee Islands (County Wexford)

The two islands of Great Saltee and Little Saltee lie off the picturesque coast of County Wexford and, although uninhabited by humans, are a popular breeding area for many birds. Visitors can take a one-hour boat trip to the island, where they can spot puffins, fulmars and more.

84. Emo Court (County Laois)

A neo-classical mansion with beautiful 18th century gardens, Emo Court in County Laois has become a popular tourist spot, with excellent woodland walks. Follow the 4.95 km Slí na Slainte loop walk to see some ancient trees.

85. The Brazen Head (Dublin)

Officially Ireland’s oldest pub, The Brazen Head in Dublin has been serving punters since 1198. To experience the full history and atmosphere of the pub, book a spot at an “Evening of Food, Folklore and Fairies” - a 2 hours and 45 minute night of entertainment, food and storytelling.

86. Night Kayaking (County Cork)

Experience the magic of night kayaking in County Cork with a 2.5 hour Starlight Moonlight tour on Lough Hyne. Watch the stars, spot native birds and gaze at the reflection of the moon and stars in the water as you paddle.

87. Dunsany Castle (County Meath)

The ancestral home of the Lords of Dunsany - and with the family still living there - Dunsany Castle in County Meath is a wonderful collection of paintings and furniture from the 18th and 19th centuries. Join one of the three-hour walks of the house and the garden to hear about Lord Dunsany and the history of this fine home.

88. Burrishoole Abbey (County Mayo)

Also known as Burrishoole Friary, the ruins of the abbey and surrounding cemetery are situated on the edge of a peaceful tidal estuary near Newport in County Mayo. Cycle or walk the easy “Abbey Trail” for beautiful views of the Abbey and the surrounding countryside.

89. Creevykeel Court Cairn (Sligo)

An excellent example of an Irish Court Tomb, the Creevykeel Cairn dates back to neolithic times and excavations have discovered four different burials within its stones. Drive the short 1.5 - 2 km past Cliffony and follow the signs to the carpark.

90. Glasnevin Cemetery (Dublin)

Holding over 1.5 million graves, Glasnevin is a huge cemetery that offers a unique, and sometimes sombre, look at the changing trends in grave memorials over the last 200 years. Join a 1.5 hour tour of the graves to discover the names and stories behind some of the cemetery’s most visited graves.

91. Old Jameson Distillery (Dublin)

Now a visitor attraction, the Old Jameson Distillery is the original site where Jameson Irish Whiskey was distilled until 197. To get a behind the scenes look at the process, and try a tipple or two yourself, join a guided tour of the distillery, lasting one hour.

92. Kilmurvey Beach (County Galway)

With the type of white sand and blue waters you would expect to find somewhere in the Mediterranean, rather than Ireland, the Blue Flag Kilmurvey Beach is a popular spot on the Aran Islands. Follow the “Ring of Aran” three-hour walking trail to see the beach and panoramic views of the sea.

93. Blennerville Windmill (County Kerry)

Tralee Bay’s most iconic structure, Blennerville Windmill was a main emigration point during the Great Famine. Located within the beautiful Tralee Bay Nature Reserve, hop on-board one of the Guided Nature Boat Tours to see birds, frogs and wetland mammals.

94. St. Michan's Church (Dublin)

Situated on Church Street within the city centre of Dublin, St. Michan’s Church is famous for the underground vaults, where visitors can see the mummified remains of some of Dublin’s most influential and well known families from the past three centuries. Join the Dublin Gravedigger Ghost Tour to find out more about the Church and it’s mummies.

95. Moneygall Village (County Offaly)

The small, picturesque village of Moneygall in County Offaly became famous in 2011, when American President Barack Obama visited to trace his Irish ancestral routes. Follow in the President’s footsteps and visit the The Ancestral Home and see where the Kearney Family lived before emigrating to America.

96. Knockma Woods (County Galway)

Follow the enchanting and mystical Fairy Walk through Knockma Woods, where the easy circular loop will bring you to the supposed spot of the Fairy Fortress. Look out for fairy houses and other (human-made) souvenirs amongst the trail.

97. The Irish Sky Garden (County Cork)

The strange Irish Sky Garden - designed by artist James Turrell - sits within the 163 acres of grounds at the Liss Ard Estate in County Cork. Book an overnight stay at the charming Liss Ard Hotel to see the Sky Garden for free or pay the small entry fee as a non-resident.

98. The Hole of the Sorrows (County Clare)

Often referred to as the “Hole of the Sorrows” but actually named Poulnabrone Dolmen, this neolithic portal tomb is a popular stop in County Clare. Once you’ve visited the tomb, follow the 1.5 hour Carran Turlough Loop to see more of this area of natural beauty.

99. Lambay Island (Dublin)

Ireland’s largest East Coast island is home to a rather unexpected animal - wallabies. The furry animals are thought to have been introduced on the private island by a former owner, and you can book one of the day boat trips from Skerries to see them up close.

100. Burkes Beach Riding (Killarney)

Experience the beauty of Rossbeigh Beach in Killarney, County Kerry, by horseback. Join a two-hour trek through the Curra Mountain before hitting the sand of Rossbeigh for an unforgettable afternoon’s ride.


List of missions to comets

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_missions_to_comets  

ICE
(ISEE-3) 

12 August 1978 

NASA
United StatesESA 

21P/Giacobini–Zinner

Flyby

Outcome: Successful

Remarks:

Extended mission; Closest approach of 7,862 kilometres (4,885 mi) at 11:02 UTC on 11 September 1985. Also made distant observations of 1P/Halley in May 1986.

Carrier: Delta 2914

Vega 1
(5VK No.901) 

15 December 1984

Soviet Union 

Flyby

 Successful

Flew past Halley after visiting Venus; closest approach 8,889 kilometres (5,523 mi) at 07:20:06 UTC on 6 March 1986.

 Proton-K/D-1

Vega 2
(5VK No.902) 

21 December 1984 

 Soviet Union

1P/Halley 

 Flyby

Successful 

Flew past Halley after visiting Venus; closest approach at 07:20 UTC on 9 March 1986.

Proton-K/D-1 

 Sakigake

(MS-T5)

7 January 1985 

  ISAS
Japan 

  1P/Halley 

  Flyby 

Successful

  Closest approach of 6.99 million kilometres (4.34 million miles) at 04:18 UTC on 11 March 1986.

  Mu-3S-II 

Giotto 

 2 July 1985

  ESA 

1P/Halley

  Closest approach of 605 kilometres (376 mi) at 00:03:02 UTC on 14 March 1986.

  Successful   

26P/Grigg–Skjellerup 

Extended mission. Closest approach of 200 kilometres (120 mi) at 15:30 UTC on 10 July 1992.[7] 

  Flyby 

  Successful 

Suisei
(PLANET-A) 

 19 August 1985

ISAS
Japan  

1P/Halley 

Successful  

Closest approach of 152,400 kilometres (94,700 mi) at 13:06 UTC on 8 March 1986[ 

 

21P/Giacobini–Zinner  

  Flyby 

  Spacecraft failure
(Extended mission) 

  Extended mission, spacecraft ran out of fuel en route; flyby had been scheduled for 24 November 1998

  Delta II7326 

Carrier Rocket: Mu-3S-II

Deep Space 1 

 24 October 1998

NASA
United States  

107P/Wilson–Harrington

Spacecraft failure 

 Spacecraft was unable to reach Wilson–Harrington due to ion engineoperation being suspended while a problem with the probe's star tracker was investigated.

19P/Borrelly 

 Successful

Extended mission 

 Carrier Rocket: Delta II7326

Stardust
(Discovery 4) 

7 February 1999 

 NASA

United States

9P/Tempel 

  Flyby 

  Successful 

  Extended mission, Stardust-NExT, to survey crater caused by Deep Impact 

  Delta II7426 

 

  CONTOUR
(Discovery 6) 

  3 July 2002 

  NASA
United States 

2P/Encke  

Flyby  

Spacecraft failure  

73P/Schwassmann–Wachmann 

Flyby 

Spacecraft failure  

  6P/d'Arrest 

  Flyby 

Spacecraft failure 

Flyby provisionally scheduled at time of spacecraft's failure

 Rocket Carrier: Delta II7425

Rosetta  

2 March 2004 

 ESA

67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko 

 Orbiter

Successful 

 Entered orbit around 67P at 09:06 UTC on 6 August 2014. On 30 September 2016 mission ended in an attempt to slow land on the comet's surface near a 130 m (425 ft) wide pit called Deir el-Medina.

Carrier Rocket: Ariane 5G+

Philae 

 2 March 2004

ESA / DLR
Germany 

 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko

Lander 

 Mostly successful

Carried by Rosetta. Came to rest on the surface of 67P at 17:32 UTC on 12 November 2014. Communications ceased with the loss of battery power at 00:36 UTC on 15 November 2014 and the lander began hibernating. Reactivated on solar power and briefly established contact with ground control again at 20:28 UTC on 13 June 2015, and sporadically until 9 July 2015 when the last communication was received.

 Rocket Carrier: Ariane 5G+

Deep Impact
(Discovery 7) 

12 January 2005 

 NASA

United States

Flyby/Impactor  

Successful  

Impact occurred at 05:52 UTC on 4 July 2005. 

  103P/Hartley  

Flyby  

Successful 

Extended mission (EPOXI) 

 Rocket Carrier

Delta II7925 

 


Evolution and the ice age

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2013/02/130226135241.htm

Date: February 26, 2013

Source: Bournemouth University

Summary: Scientists are discovering how the evolution of ecosystems has to be taken into account when speculating between different geological eras. Go back to the time of the dinosaurs or to the single-celled organisms at the origins of life, and it is obvious that ecosystems existing more than 65 million years ago and around four billion years ago cannot be simply surmised from those of today.

John Stewart conducting his research into prehistoric environments.

Credit: Image courtesy of Bournemouth University

Dr John Stewart has made important contributions to a growing body of work that shows how the evolution of ecosystems has to be taken into account when speculating between different geological eras. Go back to the time of the dinosaurs or to the single-celled organisms at the origins of life, and it is obvious that ecosystems existing more than 65 million years ago and around four billion years ago cannot be simply surmised from those of today.

Although the most drastic evolutionary changes occur over long spans of time, the effects can be seen relatively recently, argues Dr Stewart.

Stewart has studied the interaction between ancient ecosystems -- paleoecology -- and evolution of humans and other organisms over the past 100,000 years, undertaking everything from excavating cave sites in Belgium to exploring the desert of Abu Dhabi.

In one milestone collaborative study, Dr Stewart has taken existing knowledge of the geographical spread of plant and animal species throughout the warming and cooling of the Ice Ages to provide insights into human origins, including the evolution and extinction of Neanderthals.

He has also examined the rise of the 'first Europeans', along with the Denisovans -- a newly discovered group -- mysterious cousins of the Neanderthals, who occupied a vast realm stretching from the chill expanse of Siberia to the tropical forests of Indonesia.

The key insight in this work, conducted alongside Prof Chris Stringer of London's Natural History Museum, came from understanding the important role of the refuge taken by a species from harsher conditions -- known as a refugium -- which has a tremendous influence on the evolutionary future of the species. Once the climate changes again, for instance as ice sheets melt, these refuges can expand or connect up again.

But, of course, there's a twist. Evolution has also had a huge influence. The inhabitants are not the same as the original populations as a result of genetic mutations. The time spent apart in refuge generally serves to splinter a once unified species.

Previous research into hedgehogs, polar bears and other animals suggest that, even once an Ice Age ends and the different populations start intermingling again, they never really merge back together as a single group. This process drives important evolutionary changes, which can ultimately lead to the origins of a new species.

Ultimately, this explains why Homo sapiens are still here and our archaic human cousins went extinct some 30,000 years ago: our ancestors chose the right refuge to wait out the Ice Age.

Today, Dr Stewart's work has shifted away from fossil remains to ancient DNA. Traditionally insights into the evolution of species have come from fossils, but we now know that the genetic changes that underlie a major change in body shape can be minor.

"The most exciting development in my field has been the ability to analyse ancient DNA, which has begun to allow us to see evolution happening over the last several dozen thousand years," explains Dr Stewart.

His claim that climate change caused the Neanderthals' demise is supported by work by Love Dalén at the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm, who has looked at the genes in 13 Neanderthal fossils found in southern Europe and western Asia.

All Neanderthal fossils more than 48,000 years old, and those found in Asia, had a higher level of genetic diversity than later European fossils, suggesting that the Neanderthals probably went through an evolutionary 'bottleneck' where a significant percentage of them perished.

When a bottleneck occurs, the remaining individuals are often a much less diverse group, which makes it more difficult for them to evolve and adapt to a changing environment.

Dr Stewart, who is doing DNA studies in collaboration with teams at the Natural History Museum in Stockholm and the Universities of York and Royal Holloway, is now focusing on using genetics to elucidate the evolution of a wide range of creatures.

He has conducted recent studies at the cave site of Trou Al'Wesse, a refugium once occupied by Neanderthals, in Belgium. He is studying how animal populations changed as a result of Ice Age climate change to understand the evolutionary processes that have taken place over the last 50,000 years.

But his work is not confined to the past. It informs the present too. Recently there had been a proposal to eradicate the Eagle Owl because it killed other birds, such as hen harriers, and was not thought to be a native species. But Dr Stewart's studies of fossils and more recent archaeological records revealed the bird, or something like it, has been present in Britain for up to 700,000 years. The plan to cull the birds has now been abandoned.

And his research can help us predict the future. The fear is that our ever-expanding impact on the planet will trigger ecological collapse. But the only way to know for sure is to look back into the past.

"By studying how organisms have reacted to past climate change," explains Dr Stewart, "we can learn lessons about what may take place due to human-caused global warming."

Story Source:

Materials provided by Bournemouth University. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

 



  Glen Kealey - Workshop #1







    Published on Oct 28, 2012 

   
    Glen Kealy Paper
    Assembly of Independent Canadians
    Bringing People Together

Freemasonry was the first organized religion.

They fabricated all the other religions that came after.
They invented Gods, Lucifer, Angels and all that crap in order to dumb-down the masses.
It sure has worked, if one goes by the number of people who now defend their right to abandon the use of their brains.  
The definition of FAITH is ...
"to believe in some implausible premiss no matter how much evidence there is to the contrary", ie: BRAINDEAD. 



Glen Kealy exposes the hidden not talked about history of Planet Earth

GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW WITH DESERT OWL PT.1






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History of genetic engineering

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_genetic_engineering

Genetic recombination caused by human activity has been occurring since around 12,000 BC, when humans first began to domesticateorganisms. Genetic engineering as the direct transfer of DNA from one organism to another was first accomplished by Herbert Boyer and Stanley Cohen in 1972. It was the result of a series of advancements in techniques that allowed the direct modification of the genome. Important advances included the discovery of restriction enzymes and DNA ligases, the ability to design plasmids and technologies like polymerase chain reaction and sequencingTransformation of the DNA into a host organism was accomplished with the invention of biolisticsAgrobacterium-mediated recombination and microinjection.

The first genetically modified animal was a mouse created in 1974 by Rudolf Jaenisch. In 1976 the technology was commercialised, with the advent of genetically modified bacteria that produced somatostatin, followed by insulin in 1978. In 1983 an antibiotic resistant gene was inserted into tobacco, leading to the first genetically engineered plant. Advances followed that allowed scientists to manipulate and add genes to a variety of different organisms and induce a range of different effects. Plants were first commercialized with virus resistant tobacco released in China in 1992. The first genetically modified food was the Flavr Savr tomato marketed in 1994. By 2010, 29 countries had planted commercialized biotech crops. In 2000 a paper published in Science introduced golden rice, the first food developed with increased nutrient value.

Herbert Boyer (pictured) and Stanley Cohen created the first genetically modified organism in 1972

Agriculture

Genetic engineering is the direct manipulation of an organism's genome using certain biotechnology techniques that have only existed since the 1970s.  Human directed genetic manipulation was occurring much earlier, beginning with the domestication of plants and animals through artificial selection. The dog is believed to be the first animal domesticated, possibly arising from a common ancestor of the grey wolf,  with archeological evidence dating to about 12,000 BC. Other carnivores domesticated in prehistoric times include the cat, which cohabited with human 9,500 years ago. Archeological evidence suggests sheep, cattle, pigs and goats were domesticated between 9 000 BC and 8 000 BC in the Fertile Crescent.

The first evidence of plant domestication comes from emmer and einkorn wheat found in pre-Pottery Neolithic A villages in Southwest Asia dated about 10,500 to 10,100 BC. The Fertile Crescent of Western Asia, Egypt, and India were sites of the earliest planned sowing and harvesting of plants that had previously been gathered in the wild. Independent development of agriculture occurred in northern and southern China, Africa's SahelNew Guinea and several regions of the Americas. The eight Neolithic founder crops (emmer wheateinkorn wheatbarleypeaslentilsbitter vetchchick peas and flax) had all appeared by about 7000 BC. Horticulture first appears in the Levant during the Chalcolithic period about 6 800 to 6,300 BC.[9] Due to the soft tissues, archeological evidence for early vegetables is scarce. The earliest vegetable remains have been found in Egyptian caves that date back to the 2nd millennium BC.

Selective breeding of domesticated plants was once the main way early farmers shaped organisms to suit their needs. Charles Darwin described three types of selection: methodical selection, wherein humans deliberately select for particular characteristics; unconscious selection, wherein a characteristic is selected simply because it is desirable; and natural selection, wherein a trait that helps an organism survive better is passed on. :25 Early breeding relied on unconscious and natural selection. The introduction of methodical selection is unknown.:25 Common characteristics that were bred into domesticated plants include grains that did not shatter to allow easier harvesting, uniform ripening, shorter lifespans that translate to faster growing, loss of toxic compounds, and productivity.:27–30 Some plants, like the Banana, were able to be propagated by vegetative cloning. Offspring often did not contain seeds, and therefore sterile. However, these offspring were usually juicier and larger. Propagation through cloning allows these mutant varieties to be cultivated despite their lack of seeds.

Hybridization was another way that rapid changes in plant's makeup were introduced. It often increased vigor in plants, and combined desirable traits together. Hybridization most likely first occurred when humans first grew similar, yet slightly different plants in close proximity.[11]:32 Triticum aestivum, wheat used in baking bread, is an allopolyploid. Its creation is the result of two separate hybridization events.[12]

Grafting can transfer chloroplasts (specialised DNA in plants that can conduct photosynthesis), mitichondrial DNA and the entire cell nucleus containing the genome to potentially make a new species making grafting a form of natural genetic engineering.

X-rays were first used to deliberately mutate plants in 1927. Between 1927 and 2007, more than 2,540 genetically mutated plant varieties had been produced using x-rays.

DNA studies suggested that the dog most likely arose from a common ancestor with the grey wolf.[1]

Genetics

Various genetic discoveries have been essential in the development of genetic engineering. Genetic inheritance was first discovered by Gregor Mendel in 1865 following experiments crossing peas. Although largely ignored for 34 years he provided the first evidence of hereditary segregation and independent assortment. In 1889 Hugo de Vries came up with the name "(pan)gene" after postulating that particles are responsible for inheritance of characteristics[16] and the term "genetics" was coined by William Bateson in 1905. In 1928 Frederick Griffith proved the existence of a "transforming principle" involved in inheritance, which Avery, MacLeod and McCarty later (1944) identified as DNAEdward Lawrie Tatum and George Wells Beadledeveloped the central dogma that genes code for proteins in 1941. The double helix structure of DNA was identified by James Watson and Francis Crick in 1953.

As well as discovering how DNA works, tools had to be developed that allowed it to be manipulated. In 1970 Hamilton Smith's lab discovered restriction enzymes that allowed DNA to be cut at specific places and separated out on an electrophoresis gel. This enabled scientists to isolate genes from an organism's genome.[18] DNA ligases, that join broken DNA together, had been discovered earlier in 1967 and by combining the two enzymes it was possible to "cut and paste" DNA sequences to create recombinant DNAPlasmids, discovered in 1952,  became important tools for transferring information between cells and replicating DNA sequences. Frederick Sanger developed a method for sequencing DNA in 1977, greatly increasing the genetic information available to researchers. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR), developed by Kary Mullis in 1983, allowed small sections of DNA to be amplified and aided identification and isolation of genetic material.

As well as manipulating the DNA, techniques had to be developed for its insertion (known as transformation) into an organism's genome. Griffiths experiment had already shown that some bacteria had the ability to naturally take up and express foreign DNA. Artificial competence was induced in Escherichia coli in 1970 when Morton Mandel and Akiko Higa showed that it could take up bacteriophage λ after treatment with calcium chloride solution (CaCl2).Two years later, Stanley Cohen showed that CaCl2 treatment was also effective for uptake of plasmid DNA. Transformation using electroporation was developed in the late 1980s, increasing the efficiency and bacterial range.  In 1907 a bacterium that caused plant tumors, Agrobacterium tumefaciens, was discovered and in the early 1970s the tumor inducing agent was found to be a DNA plasmid called the Ti plasmid. By removing the genes in the plasmid that caused the tumor and adding in novel genes researchers were able to infect plants with A. tumefaciens and let the bacteria insert their chosen DNA into the genomes of the plants.

Griffith proved the existence of a "transforming principle", which Avery, MacLeod and McCarty later showed to be DNA
The bacterium Agrobacterium tumefaciens inserts T-DNA into infected plant cells, which is then incorporated into the plants genome.

Early genetically modified organisms

In 1974 Rudolf Jaenisch created the first GM animal.

n 1972 Paul Berg used restriction enzymes and DNA ligases to create the first recombinant DNA molecules. He combined DNA from the monkey virus SV40 with that of the lambda virus.  Herbert Boyer and Stanley Norman Cohen took Berg's work a step further and introduced recombinant DNA into a bacterial cell. Cohen was researching plasmids, while Boyers work involved restriction enzymes. They recognised the complementary nature of their work and teamed up in 1972. Together they found a restriction enzyme that cut the pSC101 plasmid at a single point and were able to insert and ligate a gene that conferred resistance to the kanamycin antibiotic into the gap. Cohen had previously devised a method where bacteria could be induced to take up a plasmid and using this they were able to create a bacteria that survived in the presence of the kanamycin. This represented the first genetically modified organism. They repeated experiments showing that other genes could be expressed in bacteria, including one from the toad Xenopus laevis, the first cross kingdom transformation.

In 1974 Rudolf Jaenisch created a transgenic mouse by introducing foreign DNA into its embryo, making it the world’s first transgenic animal.  Jaenisch was studying mammalian cells infected with simian virus 40 (SV40) when he happened to read a paper from Beatrice Mintz describing the generation of chimera mice. He took his SV40 samples to Mintz's lab and injected them into early mouse embryos expecting tumours to develop. The mice appeared normal, but after using radioactive probes he discovered that the virus had integrated itself into the mice genome. However the mice did not pass the transgene to their offspring. In 1981 the laboratories of Frank Ruddle, Frank Constantini and Elizabeth Lacy injected purified DNA into a single-cell mouse embryo and showed transmission of the genetic material to subsequent generations.

The first genetically engineered plant was tobacco, reported in 1983.[35] It was developed by Michael W. BevanRichard B. Flavell and Mary-Dell Chilton by creating a chimeric gene that joined an antibiotic resistant gene to the T1 plasmid from Agrobacterium. The tobacco was infected with Agrobacterium transformed with this plasmid resulting in the chimeric gene being inserted into the plant. Through tissue culture techniques a single tobacco cell was selected that contained the gene and a new plant grown from it.

Regulation

The development of genetic engineering technology led to concerns in the scientific community about potential risks. The development of a regulatory framework concerning genetic engineering began in 1975, at Asilomar, California. The Asilomar meeting recommended a set of guidelines regarding the cautious use of recombinant technology and any products resulting from that technology. The Asilomar recommendations were voluntary, but in 1976 the US National Institute of Health (NIH) formed a recombinant DNA advisory committee. This was followed by other regulatory offices (the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Food and Drug Administration (FDA), effectively making all recombinant DNA research tightly regulated in the USA.

In 1982 the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) released a report into the potential hazards of releasing genetically modified organisms into the environment as the first transgenic plants were being developed.  As the technology improved and genetically organisms moved from model organisms to potential commercial products the USA established a committee at the Office of Science and Technology (OSTP) to develop mechanisms to regulate the developing technology. In 1986 the OSTP assigned regulatory approval of genetically modified plants in the US to the USDA, FDA and EPA.[41] In the late 1980s and early 1990s, guidance on assessing the safety of genetically engineered plants and food emerged from organizations including the FAO and WHO.

The European Union first introduced laws requiring GMO's to be labelled in 1997. In 2013 Connecticut became the first state to enact a labeling law in the USA, although it would not take effect until other states followed suit

Research and medicine
The ability to insert, alter or remove genes in model organisms allowed scientists to study the genetic elements of human diseases. Genetically modified mice were created in 1984 that carried cloned oncogenes that predisposed them to developing cancer.  The technology has also been used to generate mice with genes knocked out. The first recorded knockout mouse was created by Mario R. CapecchiMartin Evans and Oliver Smithies in 1989. In 1992 oncomice with tumor suppressor genes knocked out were generated.  Creating Knockout rats is much harder and only became possible in 2003. 

After the discovery of microRNA in 1993,  RNA interference (RNAi) has been used to silence an organism's genes.  By modifying an organism to express microRNA targeted to its endogenous genes, researchers have been able to knockout or partially reduce gene function in a range of species. The ability to partially reduce gene function has allowed the study of genes that are lethal when completely knocked out. Other advantages of using RNAi include the availability of inducible and tissue specific knockout.  In 2007 microRNA targeted to insect and nematode genes was expressed in plants, leading to suppression when they fed on the transgenic plant, potentially creating a new way to control pests. Targeting endogenous microRNA expression has allowed further fine tuning of gene expression, supplementing the more traditional gene knock out approach.

Genetic engineering has been used to produce proteins derived from humans and other sources in organisms that normally cannot synthesize these proteins. Human insulin-synthesising bacteria were developed in 1979 and were first used as a treatment in 1982. In 1988 the first human antibodies were produced in plants.  In 2000 Vitamin A-enriched golden rice, was the first food with increased nutrient value

Paul Berg created the first recombinant DNA molecules in 1972

Further advances

As not all plant cells were susceptible to infection by A. tumefaciens other methods were developed, including electroporationmicro-injection  and particle bombardment with a gene gun (invented in 1987). In the 1980s techniques were developed to introduce isolated chloroplasts back into a plant cell that had its cell wall removed. With the introduction of the gene gun in 1987 it became possible to integrate foreign genes into a chloroplast.

Genetic transformation has become very efficient in some model organisms. In 2008 genetically modified seeds were produced in Arabidopsis thaliana by simply dipping the flowers in an Agrobacterium solution. The range of plants that can be transformed has increased as tissue culture techniques have been developed for different species.

The first transgenic livestock were produced in 1985, by micro-injecting foreign DNA into rabbit, sheep and pig eggs. The first animal to synthesise transgenic proteins in their milk were mice, engineered to produce human tissue plasminogen activator. This technology was applied to sheep, pigs, cows and other livestock. 

In 2010 scientists at the J. Craig Venter Institute announced that they had created the first synthetic bacterial genome. The researchers added the new genome to bacterial cells and selected for cells that contained the new genome. To do this the cells undergoes a process called resolution, where during bacterial cell division one new cell receives the original DNA genome of the bacteria, whilst the other receives the new synthetic genome. When this cell replicates it uses the synthetic genome as its template. The resulting bacterium the researchers developed, named Synthia, was the world's first synthetic life form.

In 2014 a bacteria was developed that replicated a plasmid containing an unnatural base pair. This required altering the bacterium so it could import the unnatural nucleotides and then efficiently replicate them. The plasmid retained the unnatural base pairs when it doubled an estimated 99.4% of the time. This is the first organism engineered to use an expanded genetic alphabet. 

In 2015 CRISPR and TALENs was used to modify plant genomes. Chinese labs used it to create a fungus-resistant wheat and boost rice yields, while a U.K. group used it to tweak a barley gene that could help produce drought-resistant varieties. When used to precisely remove material from DNA without adding genes from other species, the result is not subject the lengthy and expensive regulatory process associated with GMOs. While CRISPR may use foreign DNA to aid the editing process, the second generation of edited plants contain none of that DNA. Researchers celebrated the acceleration because it may allow them to "keep up" with rapidly evolving pathogens. The U.S. Department of Agriculture stated that some examples of gene-edited corn, potatoes and soybeans are not subject to existing regulations. As of 2016 other review bodies had yet to make statements.

Commercialisation

In 1976 Genentech, the first genetic engineering company was founded by Herbert Boyer and Robert Swanson and a year later the company produced a human protein (somatostatin) in E.coli. Genentech announced the production of genetically engineered human insulin in 1978.  In 1980 the U.S. Supreme Court in the Diamond v. Chakrabarty case ruled that genetically altered life could be patented.  The insulin produced by bacteria, branded humulin, was approved for release by the Food and Drug Administration in 1982. 

In 1983 a biotech company, Advanced Genetic Sciences (AGS) applied for U.S. government authorization to perform field tests with the ice-minus strain of P. syringae to protect crops from frost, but environmental groups and protestors delayed the field tests for four years with legal challenges. In 1987 the ice-minus strain of P. syringae became the first genetically modified organism (GMO) to be released into the environment  when a strawberry field and a potato field in California were sprayed with it. Both test fields were attacked by activist groups the night before the tests occurred: "The world's first trial site attracted the world's first field trasher". 

The first genetically modified crop plant was produced in 1982, an antibiotic-resistant tobacco plant. The first field trials of genetically engineered plants occurred in France and the USA in 1986, tobacco plants were engineered to be resistant to herbicides. In 1987 Plant Genetic Systems, founded by Marc Van Montagu and Jeff Schell, was the first company to genetically engineer insect-resistant plants by incorporating genes that produced insecticidal proteins from Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) into tobacco.

Genetically modified microbial enzymes were the first application of genetically modified organisms in food production and were approved in 1988 by the US Food and Drug AdministrationIn the early 1990s, recombinant chymosin was approved for use in several countries.[83][84] Cheese had typically been made using the enzyme complex rennet that had been extracted from cows' stomach lining. Scientists modified bacteria to produce chymosin, which was also able to clot milk, resulting in cheese curdsThe People’s Republic of China was the first country to commercialize transgenic plants, introducing a virus-resistant tobacco in 1992.  

laboratory mouse in which a gene affecting hair growth has been knocked out (left), is shown next to a normal lab mouse.

In 1994 Calgene attained approval to commercially release the Flavr Savr tomato, a tomato engineered to have a longer shelf life. Also in 1994, the European Union approved tobacco engineered to be resistant to the herbicide bromoxynil, making it the first genetically engineered crop commercialized in Europe.  In 1995 Bt Potato was approved safe by the Environmental Protection Agency, after having been approved by the FDA, making it the first pesticide producing crop to be approved in the USA.  In 1996 a total of 35 approvals had been granted to commercially grow 8 transgenic crops and one flower crop (carnation), with 8 different traits in 6 countries plus the EU.

By 2010, 29 countries had planted commercialized biotech crops and a further 31 countries had granted regulatory approval for transgenic crops to be imported.  In 2013 Robert Fraley (Monsanto’s executive vice president and chief technology officer), Marc Van Montagu and Mary-Dell Chilton were awarded the World Food Prize for improving the "quality, quantity or availability" of food in the world.

The first genetically modified animal to be commercialised was the GloFish, a Zebra fish with a fluorescent gene added that allows it to glow in the dark under ultraviolet light. The first genetically modified animal to be approved for food use was AquAdvantage salmon in 2015.  The salmon were transformed with a growth hormone-regulating gene from a Pacific Chinook salmon and a promoter from an ocean pout enabling it to grow year-round instead of only during spring and summer.

Opposition

Opposition and support for the use of genetic engineering has existed since the technology was developed.  After Arpad Pusztai went public with research he was conducting in 1998 the public opposition to genetically modified food increased.  Opposition continued following controversial and publicly debated papers published in 1999 and 2013 that claimed negative environmental and health impacts from genetically modified crops


First modern Britons had 'dark to black' skin, Cheddar Man DNA analysis reveals

The genome of Cheddar Man, who lived 10,000 years ago, suggests that he had blue eyes, dark skin and dark curly hair

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2018/feb/07/first-modern-britons-dark-black-skin-cheddar-man-dna-analysis-reveals

 A forensic reconstruction of Cheddar Man’s head, based on the new DNA evidence and his fossilised skeleton. Photograph: Channel 4

The first modern Britons, who lived about 10,000 years ago, had “dark to black” skin, a groundbreaking DNA analysis of Britain’s oldest complete skeleton has revealed.

The fossil, known as Cheddar Man, was unearthed more than a century ago in Gough’s Cave in Somerset. Intense speculation has built up around Cheddar Man’s origins and appearance because he lived shortly after the first settlers crossed from continental Europe to Britain at the end of the last ice age. People of white British ancestry alive today are descendants of this population.

It was initially assumed that Cheddar Man had pale skin and fair hair, but his DNA paints a different picture, strongly suggesting he had blue eyes, a very dark brown to black complexion and dark curly hair.

The discovery shows that the genes for lighter skin became widespread in European populations far later than originally thought – and that skin colour was not always a proxy for geographic origin in the way it is often seen to be today.

Tom Booth, an archaeologist at the Natural History Museum who worked on the project, said: “It really shows up that these imaginary racial categories that we have are really very modern constructions, or very recent constructions, that really are not applicable to the past at all.”

Yoan Diekmann, a computational biologist at University College London and another member of the project’s team, agreed, saying the connection often drawn between Britishness and whiteness was “not an immutable truth. It has always changed and will change”.

The findings were revealed ahead of a Channel 4 documentary, which tracked the ancient DNA project at the Natural History Museum in London as well as creating a new forensic reconstruction of Cheddar Man’s head.

To perform the DNA analysis, museum scientists drilled a 2mm-diameter hole into the ancient skull to obtain a few milligrams of bone powder. From this, they were able to extract a full genome, which held clues about this ancient relative’s appearance and lifestyle.

The results pointed to a Middle Eastern origin for Cheddar Man, suggesting that his ancestors would have left Africa, moved into the Middle East and later headed west into Europe, before eventually crossing the ancient land bridge called Doggerland which connected Britain to continental Europe. Today, about 10% of white British ancestry can be linked to this ancient population.

The analysis also ruled out an ancestral link with individuals inhabiting Gough’s Cave 5,000 years earlier, who appear to have performed grisly cannibalistic rituals, including gnawing on human toes and fingers – possibly after boiling them – and drinking from polished skull cups.

Britain was periodically settled and then cleared during ice ages until the end of the last glacial period about 11,700 years ago, since when it has been continuously inhabited.

Until now, though, it hasn’t been clear whether each wave of migrants was seeded from the same population in mainland Europe; the latest results suggest this was not the case.

The team homed in on genes known to be linked to skin colour, hair colour and texture, and eye colour. For skin tone, there are a handful of genetic variants linked to reduced pigmentation, including some that are very widespread in European populations today. However, Cheddar Man had “ancestral” versions of all these genes, strongly suggesting he would have had “dark to black” skin tone, but combined with blue eyes.

Scientists believe that populations living in Europe became lighter-skinned over time because pale skin absorbs more sunlight, which is required to produce enough vitamin D. The latest findings suggest pale skin may have emerged later, possibly when the advent of farming meant people were obtaining less vitamin D though dietary sources like oily fish.

Cheddar Man would have lived a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, making sharp blades from flints for butchering animals, using antlers to whittle harpoons for spear fishing and carving bows and arrows.

First Brit: Secrets of the 10,000 Year Old Man will air on Channel 4 on 18 February

850,000-year-old human footprints found in Norfolk | Science | The Guardian

Happisburgh prints believed to have been left by small group of adults and children are the oldest discovered outside Africa

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/feb/07/oldest-human-footprints-happisburgh-norfolk

 Footprint hollows on the beach at Happisburgh, Norfolk. Photograph: Martin Bates

The oldest human footprints found outside Africa, dated at between 850,000 and 950,000 years old, have been discovered on the storm-lashed beach at Happisburgh in Norfolk, one of the fastest-eroding stretches of the British coast. Within a fortnight, the sea tides that had exposed the prints last May destroyed them, leaving only casts and 3D images made through photogrammetry (stitching together hundreds of photographs) as evidence that a little group from a long-extinct early human species had passed that way.

They walked through a startlingly different landscape from today's, along the estuary of what may have been the original course of the Thames, through a river valley grazed by mammoths, hippos and rhinoceros. The pattern of the prints suggests at least five individuals heading southward, pausing and pottering about to gather plants or shellfish along the bank. They included children. The best preserved prints, clearly showing heel, arch and four toes – one toe may not have left a clear impression – is of a man with a foot equivalent to a modern size 8 shoe, suggesting a height of about 1.7 metres.

"This is an extraordinarily rare discovery," said Nick Ashton, a scientist at the British Museum, where the find was announced. "The Happisburgh site continues to rewrite our understanding of the early human occupation of Britain and indeed of Europe."

Although far older footprints have been found in Africa, the prints are more than twice the age of the previous oldest in Europe, from southern Italy and dated to around 345,000 years.

The Norfolk footprints are the first direct evidence of people at the most northerly edge of habitation in Europe, otherwise known only from fossilised animal bones and flint implements from a site nearby. The scientists worked flat out in the few hours between tides, sponging away seawater and brushing off sand, to record the prints. They were dated from the overlying sedimentary layers and glacial deposits, and the fossil remains of extinct animals – identified by Simon Parfitt, of the Natural History Museum, as including mammoth, an extinct type of horse and an early form of vole.

No human fossils have been found but the scientists from national museums and universities, who have been working at Happisburgh for a decade, believe they must be there and that there is a good chance more footprints will be exposed in a coastline crumbling on every tide – there has been 30 metres of erosion at the site since the find. Local people keep a near daily watch on the beach and phone the scientists if they spot anything interesting.

"It's a needle in a haystack," said Prof Chris Stringer of the Natural History Museum (NHM), a world authority on early humans. "There is the tiny chance of being in the right place at the right time, and recognising what you're seeing – if it's a bit of human rib going out on the tide, you might miss it completely."



 Footprints from Area A at Happisburgh, Norfolk. Photograph: Happisburgh Project

The climate then was close to that of modern Scandinavia, with warm summers and very cold winters, when the group walked across the wet mud. With the river, plain and brackish pools there was abundant food including prey animals, shellfish and edible plants. However, very soon in geological terms, perhaps within 50,000 years, the weather got much worse and the humans retreated back across the landbridge to the continent and further south.

Stringer says confirmation will have to wait for fossil finds, but he believes the Norfolk hominids were related to people from Atapuerca in Spain described as Homo antecessor, pioneer man. He believes they became extinct in Europe, perhaps replaced by another early human species, Homo heidelbergensis, then by Neanderthals from around 400,000 years ago and finally by modern humans. Life was not always a stroll across a beach: the Spanish human fossils show the same cut marks as the animal bones, evidence of cannibalism.

The Happisburgh find features in an NHM exhibition opening next week, Britain: One Million Years of the Human Story.

Old footprints

• The Laetoli Trail left by two or possibly three human ancestors – probably Australopithecus afarensis – who walked across wet volcanic ash in Tanzania, has been dated at 3.6m years. Recent analysis suggests they walked with a gait like modern humans.

• Two sets of footprints found in 2009 near Ileret in Kenya, showing an arched foot, short toes, and a parallel big toe – described by scientists as "an essentially modern foot function" – were dated to 1.5m years.

• The previous oldest find from Europe, the three sets of tracks probably of Homo heidelbergensis, left in the volcanic ash of Roccamonfina in southern Italy, now hardened into rock and so known locally as "the devils' trails", are dated to between 325,000 and 385,000 years. A handprint suggests one of the walkers overbalanced on the rough terrain.

• The earliest footprints in Australia, at least 450 prints in 22 tracks of adults and children, left in hardened silty clay at Willandra Lakes in New South Wales – identified by scientists in 2003 though local people said they already knew of them – have been dated to some 20,000 years ago.

• The oldest footprints in North America were found by road builders in the Chihuanan desert in Mexico in 1961, and were recently dated at 10,550 years old. Scientists found more tracks in the area in 2006, which have been dated at 7,250 years.


    Published on Oct 28, 2012 

   
    Glen Kealy Paper
    Assembly of Independent Canadians
    Bringing People Together

Freemasonry was the first organized religion.

They fabricated all the other religions that came after.
They invented Gods, Lucifer, Angels and all that crap in order to dumb-down the masses.
It sure has worked, if one goes by the number of people who now defend their right to abandon the use of their brains.  
The definition of FAITH is ...
"to believe in some implausible premiss no matter how much evidence there is to the contrary", ie: BRAINDEAD. 



Words From The SculPTor ~CONTRACT vs CONSPIRACY~

A contract is
a legally enforceable agreement,
not necessarily in writing,
between two or more capable people,
to do or not to do, some lawful and,
genuinely intended act.

A conspiracy is
an agreement between
two or more persons,
to commit a crime or,
accomplish a legal purpose
through illegal action.

BORN AGAIN~?

Each and every one of us was programed from birth by the SYSTEM. When we admit it and accept that those things we did and thought in the past were the result of programing, then, and only then, can we make a conscience decision not to feel bad about who we were before, but instead grasp at the new opportunity to become ourselves and take full responsibility for our actions or inactions in the future. This should be the only way that we can ever claim being “born again”.

Fatima-Phoenicians

Each letter of the alphabet is a Philosophers Stone.

The shape-shifted lowercase “S” of the Desdemona typeface is the Holy Grail / Graal (the pictogram is a symbol of the uterus implant designed for a male hermaphrodite).

Note the “PH” link between alPHabet, PHilosoPHer, HermaPHrodite, PHarmacist, ShePHerd. Then, you will overstand the importance of “HP”; Hewlett Packard who let the dogs out~!

Phoenicians are an admixture of Sea Peoples, ShePHerd Kings and Canaanites. Before moving on to Carthage they gave up Canaan to the Hittite/Hebrews, who are otherwise known as the Hycsos and were being evicted from Egypt. Before settling down in Canaan the Hebrews were given a 40 year refresher course on what was expected of them, by the Horites (God – Top Dog Priests), at Mount Sinai.

Fat-ima = Fat I am = Phat/Ptah (God of Zoro-Astrian/Zoro-Babel Freemasonry)
as in Top Hat or Frigian Tuqes, etc.

EQUILIBRIUM~!

Freemasonry’s symbols suggest that humanity needs to be shape-shifted to “bee” in order to achieve EQUILIBRIUM. A “bee” is also called a ring. The Lord of the Rings is the Queen Bee. In a beehive, genders are not required except for procreation. Freemasonry believes this matter can be best handled by a single gender now known to philosophers as Ubermensch, Beyondman or Superman. “IT” is a Hermaphrodite.

Secret Coding hidden in Language is the way they currently implement this plan. Faith based Organized Religion is their proof of its success. When all the kinks have finally been worked out through testing on their Guinea Pigs, presently known as the Human Race, humans will be destroyed and replaced with Beyondman.

At that time the Black Capstone will be retrieved and flown from the Kaaba at Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, and deposited on top of the Great White Pyramid, at Giza in Egypt.

The plan is an 8000 year criminal conspiracy, a Zoro-Astrian / Zoro-Babel Cabal known to some as the “Gulf of Aqaba Kabala” which is approaching its ultimate conclusion. The signs are all around.

Thus Spake Zarathustra~!

SYSTEM Taboos

The System, in an attempt to control comprehension, has imposed a number of taboos which they claim are out of bounds for discussion among civilized peoples. These taboos fall under the general headings of sex, politics and religion.

Those of us who now overstand have discovered that one can never come to terms with reality unless these three topics of discussion become the main topics of our communications.

As an example one should take a second look at how we treat the subject of women’s breasts. Masonry’s Pilgrims to America made certain that “nice” ladies were dressed from foot to chin. The System then allowed “Topless” dancers and prostitutes, then equating the women who do it to the derogatory term “slut”. A woman who marries for “security” or “political correctness” is never described as a slut.

The fact of the matter is that nature gave women breasts in order to feed their young. Breasts are not “sex objects” but are symbols of FEMALE POWER, symbols which are overstood instinctively by all “normal” males. This is why males instinctively look to see if the person they are speaking with has breasts. In a matrial society this is how males knew whether or not the person they were speaking with had the authority to give them directions as to what task they should perform next. Also, this is why females are still taught to reject this natural male instinct. By going along with it this deminishes the political power of women and plays right into the hands of “men who wear dresses (robes) in public”.

FINDING by CIPI

Following a number of years of investigation by the Canadian Institute for Political Integrity into the question :

“Who owns the government?”

It is our “FINDING” that all of the national governments of the world are simply AGENCIES of middle-Eastern Money Creators and TAX COLLECTORS; whose roots are firmly entrenched in Persian, Pedophile, Predatory PRIEST~HOODS (see: Zoro-Aster/Zoro-Babel); Priests who couch their control over us in fabricated diplomatic languages to veil their PREDATORY SYSTEM which, at its heart, is modeled on the CHESSBOARD and the Game of Chess.

These MONEY CREATING and TAX COLLECTING PRIEST~HOODS directly control the reins of FREEMASONRY, the Secret Society that in turn controls all POLITICS,
LAW ENFORCEMENT, ORGANIZED CRIME, FREE TRADE and ORGANIZED RELIGION.

ALL PRIESTS, OF ALL RELIGIONS, whether they are publicly styled Priest, Reverend, Bishop, Cardinal, Monk, Llama, or Pope, ultimately report through a chain-of-command that leads directly to the MONEY CREATING/TAX COLLECTING PRIEST~HOODS. Religion is a second level of direct taxation that taxes your current dreams as well as your hopes for everlasting life.

FREEMASONRY HAS HAD MANY NAMES~!

ALTHOUGH FREEMASONRY HAS USED MANY THOUSANDS OF NAMES OVER NUMEROUS CENTURIES AN EASILY DEFINABLE COMMON THREAD LINKS THEM ALL TO~GET~HER!

Freemasonry is “a war to the death against thinking women and those men who support them”, which is being fought covertly by the descendants of the first Pedophile Predator Priests from the “Land of Punt”, who were banned from participation in the affairs of Matrial Clan Society, some 60,000 years ago.

Since then, they have by means of a step-by-step conspiracy, lied about world history, divided humans in order to conquer and destroyed the credibility of women as long range nurturers and planners; convinced some braindead men that they should themselves lead a new patriarchal elitist system (based on the works of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle), while in fact taking over the management of world affairs themselves under the cover of secret societies governed at the top, symbolically, by “men who wear dresses in public” (ie: Kings, Politicians, Priests, Judges, Lawyers, Doctors, Scientists, Arab Emirs, Scots and selected University Professors and Graduates ~ MBA, PHD and LLD).

These Priest-Hoods have destroyed the paradise that was here long ago and now infest our word boxes with their confusing variety of languages (6000) and criminal financial system that rewards thieves and idiots.

Isn’t it time that we woke-up to these little known facts and respond appropriately.

THE SYSTEM

Many here don’t overstand. Few appear to comprehend Ultimate Reality. Mostly, they have fallen into the trap of Hegelian Dialectics. They believe that political opponents, military opponents, religious opponents and commercial opponents are real “competitors”, instead of in fact being the antipodean Trojan Horses or Talking Mules they are, both sides working towards the same Masonic goal for the End Times of the PlanET

Cancer vs Symptoms

Protesters have been pointing at the “symptoms” of the disease for 6,000 years and it hasn’t changed a damn thing. Symptoms are a “ball of steel wool”, a maze that leads you nowhere.

The Rockefellers have been pointing at the symptoms of Cancer from the Sloan Kettering institute without ever divulging the cure for Cancer. It has become a cash-cow business.

I suggest that if everyone concentrated on the Cancer itself (ie: who got us into the mess we’re in) rather than on the maze of never ending symptoms (ie: chemtrails and 9/11) we would turn the SYSTEM around on its ear in 20 years time.

Time is of the essence.

– The SculPTor
Glen CI4PI

One Response to “Words From The SculPTor”

hi I was fortunate to come cross your Topics in google
your subject is marvelous
I learn much in your subject really thanks very much
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where can find it  

bet365 said this on November 24, 2010 at 1:56 am   

http://www.wordsculptor.net/content/index.html

When I Woke Up!

When I finally woke up I took a look around. I saw city halls, courthouses, houses of parliament, churches, schools, and universities by the hundreds and thousands. I saw systems – systems for managing the land, the air, and the water; systems for managing human behaviour; systems for managing religion; systems for managing learning; systems for managing food, shelter, clothing; systems for managing love and procreation: a vast complex of carefully engineered systems. I saw millions of people working, not for themselves, but for someone else. I saw millions of people doing, not what they themselves want to do, but what someone else wants them to do. I saw the depressing evidence of a people who have externalized and institutionalized – in fact, have tried to standardize – the very nature of humanity.

I saw a whole people who’ve lost the way of life and in its place have built a technological monster which does most of their hard work, carries their water, delivers their food, raises their kids, makes their decisions, says their prayers, transports them, “informs” them, entertains them, and controls the people it serves, absolutely. I also saw that the monster, seemingly unable to manage itself, was running wild, totally out of visible control, ripping the land to pieces, spreading poisons, filling the air with filth, dumping garbages and shit in the rivers and lakes and oceans. I saw all that, and I saw the people, millions of them, crowded together in cities, living side by side in towns, villages, rural areas. But I didn’t see a single community.

Is someone doing all of this on purpose? Yes!

– Wilfred Pelletier and Ted Poole

~ by Scat on December 11, 2010.

Posted in Glen KealeyMind ControlNew World Orderpredictive programmingReality 
Tags: 2010blogchurchcontrolcreationculturediseaseGovernmenthumanitylifemonsternatureNew World OrderNWOpelletierpeoplepooleprogrammingscatschoolslaverysystemtedupwilfredwokework

One Response to “When I Woke Up!”

Withdraw from this evil world system in every way you can. Protect yourself from further mind control. Getting rid of your TV would be a good start.

Quietly on your own, take care of yourself and your loved ones.

I am a Christian and to me the only way “out” of this system is for each of us to belong to the only “system” that will save us.

Be Not Conformed to This World

John 17:15 I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.
16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.

Romans 12:1 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.
2 And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of God.

1 Corinthians 3:18 Let no man deceive himself. If any man among you seemeth to be wise in this world, let him become a fool, that he may be wise.
19 For the wisdom of this world is foolishness with God. For it is written, He taketh the wise in their own craftiness.

1 Corinthians 7:29 But this I say, brethren, the time is short: it remaineth, that both they that have wives be as though they had none;
30 And they that weep, as though they wept not; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not; and they that buy, as though they possessed not;
31 And they that use this world, as not abusing it: for the fashion of this world passeth away.

Galatians 1:3 Grace be to you and peace from God the Father, and from our Lord Jesus Christ,
4 Who gave himself for our sins, that he might deliver us from this present evil world, according to the will of God and our Father:
5 To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.

Galatians 4:1 Now I say, That the heir, as long as he is a child, differeth nothing from a servant, though he be lord of all;
2 But is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father.
3 Even so we, when we were children, were in bondage under the elements of the world:
4 But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law,
5 To redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.
6 And because ye are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts, crying, Abba, Father.
7 Wherefore thou art no more a servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ.
8 Howbeit then, when ye knew not God, ye did service unto them which by nature are no gods.
9 But now, after that ye have known God, or rather are known of God, how turn ye again to the weak and beggarly elements, whereunto ye desire again to be in bondage?
10 Ye observe days, and months, and times, and years.
11 I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain.

Galatians 6:14 But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom the world is crucified unto me, and I unto the world.

Ephesians 2:1 And you hath he quickened, who were dead in trespasses and sins;
2 Wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience:
3 Among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind; and were by nature the children of wrath, even as others.
Ephesians 6:11 Put on the whole armour of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil.
12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.

Philippians 2:14 Do all things without murmurings and disputings:
15 That ye may be blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world;
16 Holding forth the word of life; that I may rejoice in the day of Christ, that I have not run in vain, neither laboured in vain.

Colossians 2:6 As ye have therefore received Christ Jesus the Lord, so walk ye in him:
7 Rooted and built up in him, and stablished in the faith, as ye have been taught, abounding therein with thanksgiving.
8 Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ.

Colossians 2:20 Wherefore if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world, why, as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances,
21 (Touch not; taste not; handle not;
22 Which all are to perish with the using;) after the commandments and doctrines of men?
23 Which things have indeed a shew of wisdom in will worship, and humility, and neglecting of the body: not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh.
3:1 If ye then be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God.
2 Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth.

Titus 2:11 For the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men,
12 Teaching us that, denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, righteously, and godly, in this present world;
13 Looking for that blessed hope, and the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Jesus Christ;
14 Who gave himself for us, that he might redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works.

James 1:27 Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the world.

James 4:4 Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the enemy of God.

2 Peter 1:2 Grace and peace be multiplied unto you through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord,
3 According as his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue:
4 Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these ye might be partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust.

2 Peter 2:20 For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning.
21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them.
22 But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire.

1 John 2:15 Love not the world, neither the things that are in the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him.
16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.
17 And the world passeth away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for ever.

1 John 5:3 For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.
4 For whatsoever is born of God overcometh the world: and this is the victory that overcometh the world, even our faith.
5 Who is he that overcometh the world, but he that believeth that Jesus is the Son of God?

1 John 5:18 We know that whosoever is born of God sinneth not; but he that is begotten of God keepeth himself, and that wicked one toucheth him not.
19 And we know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness.


https://scatattack.wordpress.com/2010/12/11/when-i-woke-up/

Related

Words From The SculPTorIn "Glen Kealey"

ZEITGEIST ADDENDUM - A CRITICAL REVIEWIn "Zeitgeist"

Alan Watt's Show from June 4th, 2009In "Alan Watt"
The 6th Hermetic Principle – Cause and Effect

https://scatattack.wordpress.com/2010/12/05/the-6th-hermetic-principle-cause-and-effect/

“Every Cause has its Effect; every Effect has its Cause; everything happens according to Law; Chance is but a name for Law not recognized; there are many planes of causation, but nothing escapes the Law’  – The Kybalion

‘This Principle embodies the fact that there is a Cause for every Effect; an Effect from every Cause. It explains that: ‘Everything happens according to Law’; that nothing ever ‘merely happens’; that there is no such thing as Chance; that while there are various planes of Cause and Effect, the higher dominating the lower planes, still nothing ever entirely escapes the Law. The Hermetists understand the art and methods of rising above the ordinary plane of Cause and Effect, to a certain degree, and by mentally rising to a higher plane they become Causers instead of Effects. The masses of people are carried along, obedient to environment; the wills and desires of others stronger than themselves; heredity; suggestion; and other outward causes moving them about like pawns on the Chessboard of Life. But the Masters, rising to the plane above, dominate their moods, characters, qualities, and powers, as well as the environment surrounding them, and become Movers instead of pawns. They help to PLAY THE GAME OF LIFE, instead of being played and moved about by other wills and environment. They USE the Principle instead of being its tools. The Masters obey the Causation of the higher planes, but they help to RULE on their own plane. In this statement there is condensed a wealth of Hermetic knowledge – let him read who can.”

– Dr. Jane Ma’ati Smith, The Emerald Tablet of Hermes and The Kybalion

This is one small part of the teachings of the Mystery Schools of Babylon. Think about what was written in that passage from Dr. Smith’s book. It explains A LOT about how the world we live in today is still governed in the same manner that it was thousands of years ago and yet the majority of the people living today are ‘none the wiser’ to the fact.

“The world is governed by very different personages from what is imagined by those who are not behind the scenes.” – Benjamin Disraeli

Five Friends and Mystery Babylon

https://scatattack.wordpress.com/2010/08/20/five-friends-and-mystery-babylon/

In Freemasonry there is a circle of five friends. Italy, France, Germany, England, and America are the five circles of friends. These five friends are referred to as the Olympiads. That’s why the Olympiad Organization’s symbol is five circles, the five masonic circles of friends.

The Olympic torch, is the torch of Prometheus, the God who stole fire for the service of man. In New York in front of Rockefeller Plaza you will see the statue of Prometheus, holding in his hand a flame. The same flame that the US dime has, the same flame that the Statue of Liberty has. In fact, the Statue of Liberty doesn’t represent liberty at all. It is actually a statue of the Elites goddess Semiramis,(who is standing above a sun if looked at from above) from their ancient mystery Babylonian religion. The Statue of Liberty was a gift from French Freemason’s and an exact replica of the statue can be found in France. The torch and flame is also used in many corporate logo’s like Amoco Oil for example.




The liberty bell, another supposed symbol of liberty, is in actuality a symbol of the Brotherhood of the Bell. Bell, being Bel, an ancient God in their mystery Babylonian religion, who today we call Beelzebub or Yahweh.

Where in the World Is Julian Assange?
https://scatattack.wordpress.com/2010/12/01/where-in-the-world-is-julian-assange/

(Nov. 30) — Seemingly everyone wants a piece of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange this week, with Interpol, Sweden, the United States, Australia, Sarah Palin, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Bill O’Reilly joining the posse.

Palin says he should be hunted down “like al-Qaida.” O’Reilly calls him a “sleazebag.” Government officials want him tried for espionage, and Interpol is after him for alleged sex crimes. Others want him banned from the Internet.

Good luck with all of that. The 39-year-old recluse and self-described misfit — whose latest secret-documents dump comprises more than 250,000 diplomatic memos — has been on the lam for months.

 

Amid an escalating series of controversies, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been laying low recently and was last known to be in London.

So where is he? This month he’s apparently been in London, where he gave an interview to Forbes magazine, posted online this week after the chat was recorded at an undisclosed London apartment. The Australian native has cut and dyed his hair again to avoid detection, and promised that his site’s rage-inspiring and ongoing upload of U.S. State Department documents was only the beginning — of his latest controversy.

Up next is the disclosure of thousands of damning internal documents showing corruption by a major American bank, he told Forbes. But Assange won’t say which bank or give specifics of what it did wrong. That’s not unusual for a man who is both revered and reviled.

Assange has been laying low for several weeks now, staying with friends, using credit cards owned by others or paying in cash, canceling public appearances at the last minute or sending others in his stead. He is dogged by rape allegations in Sweden and is now under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department and his native Australia.

On Monday, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said Assange was under criminal investigation by federal agents. “This is not saber-rattling,” he told reporters at a news conference, The Associated Press reported. Saying the Obama administration condemns the publication of classified State Department documents, Holder said the posts endangered national security and the safety of diplomats abroad.

Secretary of State Clinton said much the same. “Some mistakenly applaud those responsible,” Clinton said in Washington this week. “There is nothing laudable about endangering innocent people.”

Not true, Assange shot back in a series of e-mails to ABC News from a clandestine hideout. “U.S. officials have for 50 years trotted out this line when they are afraid the public is going to see how they really behave,” he wrote. (EXACTLY!!!!!)

Apparently, only one country welcomes him — Ecuador, which offered him residency, Reuters reported today. The South American country is highly critical of U.S. doctrines and policies.

Earlier this month, Sweden issued an international sex crimes warrant against Assange in connection with two incidents in which women claimed rape and molestation. Assange said both interludes were consensual sex. This week, he was placed on Interpol’s wanted list, according the agency’s website.

Assange fled to Sweden in August, seeking protection for WikiLeaks under the country’s whistle-blowing laws after he posted nearly 400,000 classified documents pertaining to the Iraq war. Weeks before, he had posted some 77,000 classified Pentagon documents on the Afghan conflict.

Then the rape allegations surfaced, and Assange was on the run again.

In October, he sat for an interview in London with The New York Times, sporting a beanie cap and a wispy beard and speaking just above a whisper lest he be overheard. The former computer hacker said, essentially, that he was doing the Lord’s work in publishing leaked secret and classified documents.

“By being determined to be on this path, and not to compromise, I’ve wound up in an extraordinary situation,” he said

SOURCE: http://www.aolnews.com/world/article/where-in-the-world-is-wikileaks-founder-julian-assange/19738196?icid=maing|main5|1|link3|28669


TO CANADA WITH LOVE: THREE YEARS OF BS

MONDAY, AUGUST 20, 2018

 

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2018/08/to-canada-with-love-three-years-of-bs.html?m=1

Three years ago on August 21, 2015 two OPP COPS showed up on our property in Oxford Mills, ON, trespassing illegally and without a warrant and grabbed me and dragged me onto highway 18, handcuffed me and threw me in the back of a police car and drove me to the Kemptville OPP station where they put me in a cell. They told me I was in Canada illegally and that the CBSA were on the way there to pick me up and deport me. I told them that would be illegal since there was no judges order to deport me. Unknown to me at the time was that there was no order to deport me because the IRB appointed judge, Patrick LeMieux had ordered that I be granted status to stay in Canada. I was instead sent a fraudulently written order without a judges signature by an IRB office clerk with a degree in anthropology that stated I was NOT granted status to stay in Canada without any order to appear before a judge to begin a deportation process. This letter arrived in August 2014.

 

None of this made sense to me until I found out that the IRB was infiltrated with personnel from Olgilvy Renault in Montreal when it became part of Norton Rose law firm (completed June, 1, 2011). 

 

My husband Glen Kealey and I began to realize that every time we went into town we were being stalked by OPP cars. Everywhere we went, there they were. They even sent someone into the laundromat where I was washing clothes or in the area on more than one occasion. My husband was sent back to the laundromat from running his errands on several occasions by our investigators to tell me not to venture outside the laundromat. I had been taking walks along County Road 18 where our home is and found I was being stalked by OPP vehicles. I felt threatened and unsafe, so I stopped taking walks. They still continued to drive slowly by our property on a daily basis.

 

I suppose they (CBSA, OPP, Bell Canada, HydroOne, all involved and active bureaucrats in the federal government, Ontario Legal Aid, Justice Canada, Public Safety Canada, and the Grey nuns) were all trying to figure out how to pull off ejecting me from Canada without anyone finding out.

 

According to the Cell Investigators, the PMO’s office recently wrapped up a “secret” investigation of what the CBSA did to me and Glen. The question is, what will the PMO’s office do about it? Does Justin Trudeau know anything about it? Did he order it? Will he be told the results of it ? Or was it done to see how much of it can be covered up?

 

Brian Mulroney played a part in this because he had a revenge card to play against Glen Kealey, along with some other persons, some of whom are now deceased. 

 

Vic Toews, rewarded with a federal judgeship in Manitoba, that allows his “extracurricular activities” to continue there had a part in this; he who crossed over the US-Canadian borders at will attending pre-ice age Voodoo rituals in Orange County, California years ago and responsible for multiple ritualistic murders of women.

 

Bob Rae played a part because he as well made trips to the OC for rituals as well as having me drugged and brought against my will into Ottawa back in 1991 for ritualistic purposes where he, the Lion, a member of the NDP at the time, officiated. He also dismissed charges laid against Mulroney and his cabinet by Lynn Coulter, senior Justice of the Peace, after the 501 hearings held in parliament in June 1991. Brian Mulroney and Bob Rae got together after that and had the laws changed so that no one like Glen Kealey could ever again hold someone in politics committing crimes accountable for what they were doing.

 

Kathleen Wynn had a part in this, though she tried to appear as though she did not, because she too attended rituals in the OC, that is, Orange County. 

 

This is why it is not about which party is in power in Canada and the province of Ontario, as the CBC is actively promoting on their site, as well as any other media outlet, and believe me, they have an agenda, and the truth is not it. They do not inform the public about the facts; they filter the truth when they actually decide to put out something. Most of the time they lie by Omission. They have been forced to allow some of my comments in their commentaries, then they try to bury them with a large amount of submissions following mine. Of course, that is after they have their CBC staff of Brown Nosers make vicious and stupid comments intimating that I am crazy, and some of them make reference to the material posted on this site that I have written. Will ANY of this impress CREATION when their trials come up? I think not. CBC et al have never printed anything, never investigated, never called my husband and asked him what is going on. And yes they were sent faxes and emails all along through all these years by myself because the investigators and Glen asked me to do it.

 

A bureaucracy is running Canada and it does not report to the ministers or to the Prime Minister, aided and abetted by the media, who take orders from their billionaire bosses and then there is the infestation of the United Nations, another bureaucracy that wants to control everything, the chief one being the location of DNA, therefore, people.

 

Having been married to Glen (in Merrickville, ON) June 21, 2010, I have been with my husband in all that time to this date, August 21, 2018, approximately 2 years and 7 months.

 

Where is my 2010 legally submitted immigration application and $550.00 fee submitted to Immigration Canada and held by them to this day? Why is nothing being done? Who is really running Canada?

 

In all this time no attorneys in Canada ever did anything except aid the criminals- the Crown controlled by Vic Toews and Legal Aid Ontario, controlled by Kathleen Wynn included.

 

I begged Andre Marin for assistance when I was in OCDC and about to be illegally deported, via a fax that I know he received; according to our investigators he was advised by his attorney NOT to assist me.

 

Andre Marin, you are a fraud.

 

It appears that attorneys do whatever Norton Rose Olgilvy Renault AKA Brian Mulroney want.

 

I wrote to Rocco Galati, an Atty in Toronto (on advice of attorney Richard S. Jordan, retired RCMP staff sergeant for special federal investigations unit) and never heard anything from him, even after follow up faxes. Did you ever receive what I sent, or did an office bureaucrat take it? I don’t know anymore because it appears all attorneys are controlled but present and talk as if they aren’t.

 

How about a shout out and public acknowledgement of amicus Atty Laila Demirdache, observed passing messages by me and my husband during my IRB hearing teleconference to an unknown woman sitting in the vicinity of IRB judge Patrick LeMieiux ( who told us it was not his doing for her to be there and that he would be going away on holiday after this hearing on new father leave) on screen during my IRB hearing letting her know that she, Demirdache was on board with the Olgilvy Renault aka Brian Mulroney agenda, and did not do one single thing to positively assist me. She, the UNited Nations bureaucratic spy who made a reappearance at the IRB hearing teleconference held at OCDC October 30, 2015, chatting with the “representative of the Public Safety Minister“ who refused to answer my question of which public safety minister she was actually representing given the fact that there was no one in the Harper government in power at that time and the Liberal government would not be in power until November 2, 2015. In that teleconference hearing held in OCDC that date of October 30, 2015, judge Francois Milo ordered me to reappear before him Friday November 6, 2015 and that the “deportation” was NOT TO BE CARRIED OUT. But I guess they felt they had to go through with it because Jose Valioghli,CBSA bully and liar, who came to OCDC and repeatedly harassed and threatened me for weeks beforehand and that day before the hearing with the IRB judge Valioghli had already given me a fraudulent piece of paper where it was already written “ Refused to sign”. By the way, I still have this piece of paper in my possession.

 

Laila, you who simply came to make sure the job was finished, and who again, did nothing in my defense, CREATION awaits you for your trial.

 

Amicus is definitely a friend of the court, and not the person they allegedly represent. Amicus means they are sent to purposely harm your case.

 

I filed a Leave To Appeal in the Ottawa Federal Courthouse after going to the Ministry of Justice in Ottawa in late August 2014 after never being advised by Laila Demirdache that it had to be done within a certain time period of receiving the phony denial by the aforementioned IRB flunky. At the time we were acting on the belief that I had been denied so it was important to get this hearing and put all the story on the record. We hand- delivered a copy of this filing to Laila Demirdache that very day in her office. She never responded to us about the filed letter; we still acted on the chance that she was going to be helpful and that she had Integrity. When we took the paperwork up to the fifth floor of the courthouse to turn it in, the guard there looked at it and mentioned that someone from CRA had been up there just before us and was in fact looking for this paperwork. I suppose the intent was to make sure it was never filed. But it did get filed and I received a letter from the court stating this and an Atty by the name of Max Binnie was assigned to represent the Crown. Glen called him in late September 2014 asking when there would be a hearing and when would we be notified of it. He said a letter with the date would come soon via registered mail and the next step was to wait for it. Well, it never came. Instead, in December 2014, I received a letter stating the hearing had come up the previous month in November and that because I was not there, my Leave to Appeal had been dismissed. 

 

In February 2015, Laila Demirdache contacted us and applied pressure for me to begin the Immigration paperwork all over again. We refused, as this would have given Immigration Canada bureaucRATS a chance to get rid of the paperwork and $550.00 fee I legally filed with them, and which they still hold to this day.

 

I WILL NOT REFILE MY IMMIGRATION PAPERWORK; Mr.Beaulieu asked me why can’t I just refile, and I stated the above.

 

I want all of you involved in this exposed, charged and tried. I would like it to start here and now. But CREATION is in charge, not I. You will be sent to the PINEAL Court in the end though. The longer this goes on, the more time and penalties are piling up against you.

 

Obviously attorneys all communicate and stand together.

 

The previous letter on this site that I wrote engendered a response from the Prime Minister’s office and then a response from a person, a Micheal Beaulieu, stating he is with SIU-UDS-PENSION inviting me to call him, which I did. I spent 52 minutes on the phone with him talking about what had been done to my husband and that the connection goes to CCRA/ CRA, and their ties to CBSA. He listened, was polite, stated he would file a report and that he could only address my husband’s issues. He seemed stunned when I told him what had happened to me. He obviously was on the site because he asked me about the posted message about a fund to help me get to Canada, a post that never received a single response; a test to see if anyone reading the site would want to help. He then asked why couldn’t Glen move to the USA and then why would I still want to go to Canada if all of this had happened, something only ever asked me by bureaucrats who have knowledge of the crimes committed against me and my husband.

 

Does the Prime Minister even know about the email from his office and the “report” Mr. Beaulieu said he was going to file?

 

Will something be done by the Prime Minister and any currently active individuals in the federal Canadian government, or are you all in on it, or are you all outnumbered, or do you just not care? CREATION wants to know before you show up for trial.

 

Mrs. Jennifer Ann Kealey

PS- When is someone going to deal with what Hydro One and Bell Canada have done to my husband Glen Kealey and our home and property as our home is now damaged beyond repair , having been flooded three or four times in the last two years because the sump pump does not come on and winter is coming.

Would any of you like to live without heat or a working toilet in the winter? CREATION is watching.....and eternity is a long, long, long time......

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 8:06 PM  

 

 

 

MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2017

THE MEDIA’S “NON-PERSON” You Be The Judge

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2017/10/the-medias-non-person-you-be-judge.html?m=1

THE MEDIA’S “NON-PERSON”

You Be The Judge

 

I'm confused....according to every Canadian I know Canada is perfect.:uh:

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:39 AM

S T A T E M E N T O F F A C T S

re: Brian Mulroney Imposed 50 Metre "KEALEY LAW"

(by Order in Council) on Parliament Hill in Ottawa

 

June 1986 

Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's then Minister of Public Works,

Roch LaSalle, demanded bribes of $5,000 cash (for himself) plus a further

5% ($8,000,000 - for the Prime Minister and his Cabinet) from a development

company MICOT INC. At the time Glen Kealey's $160 million hi-tech MICOT

construction project was under way in Hull, Quebec.

In return, Roch LaSalle promised a "concrete gesture of support" for MICOT.

Glen Kealey, MICOT company's President and then a "Director" of the Tory Party in the riding of Hull-Aylmer, immediately protested both bribe requests, and as well, refused outright to pay politicians any bribe what-so-ever.

1987 - 88 Kealey's MICOT partners later joined with the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) in a failed court attempt contrived to remove Kealey from his position as the legally recognized President and CEO of MICOT INC. However, due to the existence of an unimpeachable "Unanimous Shareholders Agreement" between the partners signed at the incorporation of the MICOT partnership, Kealey easily won the court challenge. Unfortunately however, MICOT did not survive this public courtroom dispute. The futuristic project, along with its 5,000 jobs, died "in the egg". The MICOT site was repossessed by the mortgage holder and immediately developed (by Bell Canada - it is presently Bell Canada's regional headquarters).

 

Spring 1988 

Further, Kealey witnessed and publicly protested to the national electronic media, the national electronic media, the outright rigging by Quebec Tories, of the Hull-Aylmer Tory riding association Presidency. This misdeed made possible a "pre-selection" of a federal election candidate. 79 votes were collected from only 72 people present in the room. The two main

vote-riggers, Pierre-Claude Nolin and Fernand Simard, were later richly rewarded with "positions at the public trough", by Prime Minister Mulroney. Nolin became a "Senator-for-life" while Simard was named Co-Chairmain of the "unbiased" R.C.M.P. “Public Complaints Commission”.

 

Spring 1988

(cont.) When Kealey reported both events, the requests for bribes and the rigging of elections, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (R.C.M.P.) simply refused to investigate even though Kealey submitted to and successfully passed a poly-graph (lie detector).

Summer 1988 Mulroney called the election for November 22, 1988 and both Kealey and Blais-Grenier ran, and lost, as indepenents. Brian Mulroney due to the infusion of $53 million illegally contributed by international bankers and their trans-national corporations in support of the "FREE TRADE" issue (i.e. National AIDS), easily bought his second election victory.

Evidently, due to the deceitful system employed by federal parties of pre-selecting their candidates as described above, in concert with the ridicule foisted upon independent campaigns by a controlled national media, Canadians outside Quebec were, once again,forced to choose from one of the crooks who ran for the mainstream political parties.

As well, most Quebecers straddled a nationalist fence and elected a number of

CLOSET SEPARATISTS whom, like by magic, always appear as candidates in

"federal" parties in Quebec, at the time of elections.

 

Nov. 22, 1988 

Kealey observed enough crime to comprehend that the "SYSTEM" did not function for

Canadians but against them. He decided to turn his "weakness" into power. He chose to become a "National Town-crier" on the national town square - Parliament Hill, in Ottawa. Since one cannot be successfuly sued for liable when one reports criminal activity by politicians because it is "in the public's interest", Kealey began a thousand day vigil against corruption on Parliament Hill. Kealey met with a large number of "insiders". These included M.P.'s, House of Commons security staff, members of the Quebec Provincial Police, R.C.M.P. and C.S.I.S.. Most helped Kealey expand and develop his growing suspicion about the existence of a vast "conspiracy - to cease and limit police

political corruption investigations". Spring 1989 With the first cold winter on the Hill behind him, Kealey's unpaid "job" in Ottawa finally came to the attention of the Canadian public. A reporter, an "outsider" from Toronto, Mrs. Stevie Cameron of the Globe & Mail was first to report on his activities. At first,

not realising her solid connections to Canada's Military Security Service (C.S.E.),Kealey had believed her that she wanted to expose all political corruption. However, subsequent events proved she had been selected by our controllers. Cameron was the only reporter positioned to discredit Mulroney nationally, "without causing them any collateral damage". This she did by focusing her audience on what she claimed he represented - an "aberration".

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:41 AM

 

Nov. 1, 1989 

Following discussions on viable court tactics with Liberal MP John Nunziata, a well publicized member of the "Rat Pack", Kealey obtained an "appointment with justice" on Nov. 8, 1989 - for the purpose of "laying an information". It accused the R.C.M.P. command of "ceasing and limiting investigations", and, many Tory politicians along with their aids of "conspiray - to commit fraud upon the government".

Immediately, the R.C.M.P. top brass responded with a call to government

departments and agencies to meet, on an urgent basis, in order to discuss

the problem of "the lone protestor on Parliament Hill".

 

Nov. 8, 1989 

It was on this same date that both of these events - Kealey's first "appointment with justice" and the R.C.M.P.'s first meeting with "interested parties" - occurred in different locations, in Ottawa.

At their meeting the R.C.M.P., stated they had received a direction from the Speaker of the House of Commons in response to a complaint reeived from their "boss", Doug Lewis, the Solicitor General, requested that a change be made to the Standing Regulations on the use of Parliament Hill". Most lawyers from other departments vehemently objected. Such a move against Kealey, they said, would be illegal and "unconstitutional", and unacceptable limit placed on the freedoms of people of Canada. Mulroney disregarded these stern legal warnings and ordered the change be made to the law anyhow.

Meanwhile, at the Ottawa courthouse, Lynn Coulter agreed to hold a public 507 hearing (Case #1) to determine if sufficient evidence existed to allow Kealey's explosive charges to go forward. February 1990 After the Christmas break, when Lynn Coulter began her Section 507 Hearing(Case #1), she inexplicably overturned her own decision to hold the 507 hearing in public and declared "it will be held in secret" (in camera). The national news media immediately appealed her "change of heart" and her new decision was son reversed by the Supreme Court of Ontario. The section 507 hearing was further delayed, until the fall of 1990, because the R.C.M.P. appealed in turn, this time to the Ontario Court of Appeal. Here one cannot allow oneself be mislead by the actions of the national media brass, to erroneously conclude, by the media filing an objection to the R.C.M.P. appeal, that they were in fact disagreeing with the practice of holding secret 507 hearings. Just the opposite. These media bosses understand the origin of their funds. For the media, money, and subsequently profits and bonuses, are the result of the sale of advertising to their clients, and, that the richest media advertisers are banks, governments and trans-national corporations. Media are essentially the private properties of the same international bankers (Rothschilds) who control us. In fact, national governments serve international bankers foremost; as "money launderers". Otherwise, were it not for "their" government's ability to tax away "their" profits, to later return "their" money to "them"alone - when it's paid back as "interest" on "our" phoney national debt -- "their" government and corporate properties would come under intense pressure to share "their" enormous cash surpluses, with deserving employees and minority shareholders.

 

The true purpose of the appeal by the police brass and subsequent challenge

by the controlled media was first, to buy time for the controller's "think-tanks"

and second, for all time, to entrench in precedent making ruling the fact that

these 507 hearings would always be held in secret; so that any evidence

brought forward in this venue would be forever kept from public view. This

appeal served to finally close a small loop-hole that benefitted ordinary people,

in the controllers legal industry. 

 

March 19,1990 

This is the day that will live in Canadian infamy.

Brian Mulroney's cabinet had brutally discounted all of the objections raised by

the government's own lawyers and finally imposed the Kealey Law by means of a police state type "Order in Council" 

 

March 19, 1990

(cont.) At 3:00 pm, following Question Period in the House, the R.C.M.P. brass ordered that the new 50 metre regulation be enforced. Kealey had become too great a threat to our corrupt politicians. Glen Kealey was arrested and detained (Case #2).

Although he was quickly offered his immediate release in return for an undertaking not to return to Parliament Hill, Kealey refused a conditional release. Acquiescence under duress, in Kealey's view, would have created an unwarranted and unconstitutional precedent. He was therefore held in jail for 4 nights and 5 days.

Many times he was handcuffed and his ankles were chained to other prisoners

charged with murder. Other inmates started fights. Concerned politicians visited him. Kealey used this opportunity to speak to Canadians, on open-line radio, across Canada. Meanwhile, some Liberal and New Democratic members of the House protested in Kealey's place on the Hill and bus loads of other protestors prepared to come to Ottawa. The R.C.M.P. commissioner relented under this and other public pressure (telephone calls, faxes, telegrams and letters) and ordered the police to refrain from any further arrests. On Friday, March 23, 1990, Kealey was released from jail, albeit over the forceful objections of the R.C.M.P.. Kealey immediately returned to the Hill.

 

April 1990 

Kealey promptly obtained a Legal Aid Certificate and hired a lawyer, Mr. Todd McKendrick,to launch a lawsuit for his damages, in the Federal Court (CASE #3).

Ontario Legal Aid limited Kealey's claim to a maximum $49,000 in damages while other courts have, in the past, awarded damaged of $18,750 per 24 hrs. of illegal detention -or $75,000 for four days.

As Kealey would later discover this was not the only time the servile legal industry would conspire against Canadians, to limit the exposure of corrupt politicians and to manage and control lawsuits on behalf of their hidden sponsors (the 300 members of the Rothschild "extended" family of international bankers who, in fact, secretly direct the actions of the Canadian government from behind the scene).

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:44 AM

 

July 1990 As a result of the continuous pressure originating from all sectors of the Canadian public, a meeting of the Joint Committee of the House and Senate on Regulations unanimously demanded that the Kealey Law be repealed. They declared the new regulation an abuse of power and clearly unconstitutional.

Summer 1990 Kealey apparently became the target of a "hidden agenda", when two former business associates came forward and insisted in paying for a lawyer who, they said, would help with his Section 507 hearing (Case #1). Robert Wakefield is the lawyer they hired. His links to Ontario Legal Aid (he chairs the Committee) and to the Law Society (he tests lawyers during their Bar exams) worried Kealey from the beginning, however, because he was being paid by people claiming to be close friends, Kealey had lowered his guard. However, as if a BIG HAND was watching over Kealey, Bob Wakefield's real agenda (managing the case so that only LaSalle would be charged) became increasingly clear. Wakefield was unceremoniously dumped by Kealey. A second lawyer, one Arthur Coggan, was immediately slotted into place and paid, by Kealey's so-called "friends".

 

September 1990

Following the request made by the House and Senate Joint Committee on Regulations,Kim Campbell, then Minister of Justice, announced that the government was repealing the Kealey Law and would not proceed with the case against Glen Kealey (ie: Disobeying a police officer in the conduct of his duty Case #2).

 

November 1990

A decision on the R.C.M.P. appeal of the earlier decision by the Supreme Court of Ontario, to close the Section 507 hearing to the public (Case #1), was announced. The Court of Appeal ruled in favour of the Commissioner and ordered the hearing be held in secret. This decision enshrined the in-camera (secret) nature of all future Section 507 hearings.

As well, in obious conflict of interest, Kealey's new lawyer had in the interim period,been hired by 3 members of the R.C.M.P. to represent them before the

Marin Inquiry on police actics. The Section 507 hearing (Case #1) was again

delayed to June 6 1991. Kealey, once he had again clearly established his second lawyer's conflict, had no alternative but to dismiss him too. Subsequently this lawyer, Arthur Coggan, refused to refund $5,000 of his retainer, although in many other opinions he had not earned it. The second $10,000 retainer had been donated by "another friend of Kealey's" who, surprisingly to all then became a major supplier to the government. He did not object to the fee. Significantly, the decision to choose Arthur Coggan, the second lawyer picked to present Kealey's case against the Tories, had been made by Kealey's former business lawyer.

 

November 1990

(cont.) Later, it was also discovered that Kealey's former business lawyer, Ken Gibson, also represented an important Tory cabiner minister in matters relating to the minister's business affairs. It then became evident to Glen Kealey that

the entire process of choosing the lawyers, who supposedly were there

"to assist him" in his Section 507 (Case #1) had, in all likelihood, been

orchestrated by elements of a secret "brotherhood" of "common interests"

who had conspired from the outset to do just the opposite.

 

Jan. 15, 1991

Following the outbreak of hostilities in the Gulf War, the R.C.M.P. grabbed this second opportunity circumvent the will of parliament - to unilaterally re-instate the Kealey Law, on Parliament Hill. The R.C.M.P. by using

the false pretext of the need to add security on the Hill, a member of the

force approached Kealey and requested his co-operation "only for the

duration of the Gulf war". Kealey was requested, and naively agreed,

to remain beyond the barricades ("temporarily erected") on the Hill.

 

Jan. 26, 1991 

The end of the Gulf war was first declared by the U.S.A. and the U.N. and then announced on CNN. Kealey immediately informed the R.C.M.P. of

his plan to return to his original spot beyond the temporary barricade.

He was denied permission. Officers stated they were reneging on their

earlier promise and Kealey was told the barricades would remain

indefinitely. Kealey reconfirmed his intent to regain his spot - no later

than the next day. Feb. 27, 1991 Kealey returned to his pre-Gulf war position on the Hill and was unceremoniously arrested. After being charged he was released on a promise to reappear in court for trial.

 

Feb. 28, 1991 Kealey again returned to his original spot across the street from the west entrance to the centre block only to be re-arrested. This time he was held in jail overnight and told he would be tried before a judge alone at 10:00 am the next morning. Being unable to retrieve his files Kealey had no choice but to accept a lawyer from the Legal Aid list. He chose Richard Bosada, a lawyer whom he had met once before. Bosada had offered his legal services "free of charge if need be" just for the chance to assist Kealey at the section 507 Hearing (Case #1).

 

Mar. 1, 1991 A "trial" took place with regards to the charges of Feb. 27 and 28 combined.No evidence was presented to the court that proved Kealey had broken any law. To the contrary the court was told Kealey was not a threat. This was confirmed by the R.C.M.P. officer. But the politically appointed judge, Maria Linhares de Souza had already been given firm instructions. Kealey was declared guilty by her "of disobeying a police officer" and was sentenced to one year's probation. Counsel Bosada promised he would appeal (he lied).

Kealey told the political judge, to her face, that he would return to his spot on

the Hill.

 

Mar. 27, 1991 Canadian ships had returned from the Gulf and were anchored in Halifax harbour.

 

As usual, true to his word, Kealey returned to his spot on the Hill and was

arrested once more. However, this time Kealey took the additional precaution

of having the entire event publicized and video taped. The video tapes reveal

to all who care about justice and democracy. The police acted as if they were

law makers instead of being the enforcers of laws made by Parliament.

Kealey was subsequently booked (Case # 4). However, trial was postponed,

pending the appeal promised to the court on March 1, 1991, by Counsel Bosada.

 

June 6, 1991 Section 507 Hearing (Case #1) began hearing witnesses. Thirteen key witnesses were called to testify during a sixteeen day period that ended

with a decision, on July 16, 1991. Criminal charges were laid, by JP Coulter,

against e a c h of the sixteen police and political people accused by

Glen Kealey.

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:46 AM

"Highlights of TESTIMONY before JP LYNN COULTER

 

Suzanne Blais-Grenier (former Cabinet Minister)

 

- Blais-Grenier testied that she joined the PC,s in March 1984, beame a candidate in July 1984 and was elected Sept. 4, 1984

 

- Blais-Grenier served as Minister of Environment from Sept. 16, 1984 until Aug. 1985, when she was demoted, purportedly over an expense account involving a trip to Paris, to the post of Minister of State - Transport, where she served until Dec. 31, 1985. She was, during this entire period, the political Minister responsible for the entire Island of Montreal. Her difficulties with government policy became a source of public debate, when she disagreed openly with her cabinet colleagues over the shut-down of an ESSO oil refinery, on the island.

 

-Blais-Grenier became aware of kick-backs almost immediately as she had received information on this, "from many sources". She believed that there was insufficient split between politics and the awarding of contracts and could not understand why Mulroney did not put a stop to this practice. Although "patronage" was a central question when they took over and some Ministers agreed with that course of action, the only talk on the matter was on the question of "good or bad patronage", the difference being only - who benefied most, a TORY or someone else?

 

- Blais-Grenier testified that Roch LaSalle described himself as "The Mininster of Patronage", and that Mulroney regularly promised caucus a new code of ethics, but he never "really" delivered. Contracts were given only to those close to "political organizers". Big contracts were always only given by the PMO.

 

- Blair-Grenier believed that Frank Moores and his firm GCI had influence on contracting far beyond what she thought the norm should be. His representatives had assisted in department committee meetings that dealt with the "policy of contracting", and became aware of sensitive information which would give his company an advantage, when that policy was later translated into a business contract. The Deputy Minister even left the Department of Transport to join GCI. Moores' group was often recommended by Civil Servants because they "have an ear in the PMO". Many lobbying firms did not exist before 1984 - until they were created "by friends of the Prime Minister".

- Blais-Grenier testified that only Bernard Roy, the Prime Minister's Chief of Staff, controlled contracting. Only Roy could approve big contracts - not the Civil Servants. "He was much more important than any Minister". 

 

- Blair-Grenier knew that a "secret PC Fund" existed. It was funded from an additional 5% added to contracts and the money that was collected in that way was routed or diverted off-shore (she was told Luxembourg), where it was controlled by Bernard Roy and...by both Senators Charbonneau and Bazin. She was told the money was for the PM's retirement or for Mulroney's secret PC fund. "Short lists" were identified from longer lists, 5% was built into the contract. Blais-Grenier believed civil servants had to know, as 4 or 5 bidders were being told to "take back your bid, the contract is already given ...you will get yours".

 

- Blais-Grenier testified that P-C Nolin always brought up his father-in-law's engineering firm, "they were very active bidders". Later, "when there were rumours of something about to go PUBLIC, Nolin set up a lobbying firm with another friend of the PM". Much to the PM's dismay, roch LaSalle had also established his own competing operation called, Intergestion DG but the Big Guys were always Roy, Charbonneau and Bazin and in Quebec, Michel Cote. "For me it was always the group of the PM and the LaSalle group". The areas of most activity were Defence, Public Transport, Spply & Services, and Public Works before and after the departure of Roch LaSalle. After an investigation into the corrupt practices of the government, Lucien Bouchard (the so-called Mr. Clean), confirmed her own view. However an election in 1988 prevented him from obtaining a "code of ethics". Later he joined the BQ.

 

- Blais-Grenier believed that "at some level, the RCMP is as corrupt as the politicians". They would enter her apartment without her permission and tried to "bug" her riding office. They were like "an eye, without a mandate". If they would be "equally zealous" when investigating the higher level politician, as they are with the lower ranks, they would have more success. "The RCMP do not expose crime at that level, they PROTECT POWER."

 

- Blais-Grenier said in her opinion that problem stems from the activities of about 30 individuals, mostly in the ranks of aides to Cabinet Ministers, Mandarins and Lobbyists. Here the Prime Minister has all the power, there are no checks and balances like in the United States. The system really is a dictatorship, when we call for an inquiry, we are expelled. Peter White was Mulroney's trouble-shooter. "My mortal sin was that I did not play the game". Corruption exists in Ontario as well, simply because "that's where most of the BIG money is".

 

- Blais-Grenier believes the solution to the problem lies in a Royal Commission, called to investigate contracting, without pointing the finger at any individual. That, in her opinion, would attract the witnesses who know the facts, but who are afraid of the ramifications of Criminal process.

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:48 AM

"Highlights of TESTIMONY before JP LYNN COULTER

 

Frank Majeau (former Executive-Assistant)

 

- Majeau described his role as that of "special assistant and senior advisor" to the Minister of Public Works, Roch LaSalle. He admitted to a criminal record for an "assault" dating back to the early 1980's. Majeau once operated an agency named Prestige Entertainment in Toronto, during 1984. The agency supplied topless dancers to Striptease clubs in Ontario and Quebe. (His partner at the time was Real Simard, a Mafia hit-man. They had operated with the full blessing of the Cotroni Family in Montreal and of the Johnny Papalia gang, in Hamilton).

 

- Majeau testified that during 1979 he led, at Roch LaSalle's request, a team of five businessman including himself, J-C Salvail, Luc Beaulieu, Richard Leduc, and Dr. St. Piere, a psychiatrist, who conspired together in an attempted bribe request. Accompanied on their trips by RCMP officer Denis Lapointe (for security reasons) they met in St. Louis with both Presidents of McDonell Douglas and General Dynamics, asking each of them, in turn, for $10 million. This was to be paid to them, on behalf of Roch LaSalle. In return for the kickback, the bribe was intended to guarantee the purchase from one manufacturer or the other, of the huge 5 to 12 billion dollar fighter plane contract. The team also wanted a further ongoing kickback of 5%, added to future purchases of parts and labour. The plan was abandoned later, only when the Joe Clark Tory government of the day was defeated in a non-confidence vote, resulting in an election call. The TORIES lost the election, to the TRUDEAU LIBERALS.

 

- Majeau testified that Denis Lapointe had headed the RCMP's Montreal Economics Crimes Unit. Denis Lapointe was a childhood friend and was fully aware of the purpose of their joint trips. He was used in situations where he could identify other members of the RCMP and had joined this team of fraud artists, with the apparent blessing of the R.C.M.P. BRASS. He would always bring along the latest electronic devices normally utilised by the RCM to "sweep" rooms for any hidden listening device, considering they might well be "bugged or otherwise listened to" by the FBI, while on their many visits into the USA. (Insp. Denis Lapointe was arrested recently (1987), on 11 counts of accepting a benefit ($500,000 in one case alone), from suspects he was assigned to investigate. At his secret trial, a guilty plea was negotiated on one count only and Lapointe was sentenced to 180 days of community work. Inspector Raymond Berube later replaced Lapointe in Montreal.)

.....[mind-boggling info...Anyone interested will have to contact Glen Kealey directly]

 

- Majeau testified about a discussion he once had with Roch LaSalle about the time Mulroney agreed to pay all of roch's outstanding debts. It happened just after the election of 1984 (and following the multiple break-ins that were detected at PC headquarters, at the PC Canada Fund, at the office of the deceased Rodrigue Pageau and the offices of soon to die, Roger Nantel, in Montreal). LaSalle met with Mulroney's accountant in Quebec City (Michel Cote) and was relieved of his entire 1984 ($300,000 - mostly gambling) debt load, before being appointed debt-free, Minister of Public Works. Majeau agreed with Michel Gravel, that LaSalle would use his family member, in his obvious attempt to launder his funds, by paying cash for labour and materials during the construction of his house.

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:50 AM

 

Highlights of TESTIMONY before JP LYNN COULTER

 

Insp. Jean-Pierre Witty [RCMP-SFIU]

 

- Witty's background included joining the Commercial Crimes Section in 1978, the Special Federal Investigations Unit in 1985, moving to "A" division at RCMP Headquarters during 1988 and finally back to 400 Cooper St. Ottawa, with the SFI Unit, in 1991.

 

- Witty testified that he was "preoccupied by the names and contents of the files", requested by Kealey. "I had raised the issue with the CROWN and met with them at least three times, for about 2-2-1/2-3 hrs., each time. I made my superiors aware of the sensitive nature of the files. One file contains 8 boxes. I had some discussion with my superiors on the type of evidence I would give. I sought legal advice about my position and about the sensitivity of the files. I retained Barbara McIsaac (Justice Dept. lawyer) as my counsel. I gave her a retainer"

 

(During a break, taken when McIsaac had been ordered to "elect" whom she represented - either the officers personally or the Section 507 Hearing interests of the RCMP on the whole - Mrs. McIsaac was overheard speaking to Inspector raymond Berube, who in turn responded, "I have never heard of a witness being represented by counsel, I don't want to perjure myself")

 

- Witty confirmed that Kealey had successfully passed a polygraph about the allegation he had made, about how Roch LaSalle had asked him for a bribe. Witty also testified that in 1985, he Witty, had sought charges against LaSalle, during the Gravel investigation, but that he had been convinced by Crown Prosecutor Valmont Beaulieu in Hull (promoted soon after the Gravel "guilty plea" and now a judge), that there was insufficient evidence. (There never exists sufficient evidence for a politically appointed Crown, or for the RCMP brass for that matter, who are intent only on "Protecting Power"). Witty agreed that Suzanne Levesque (daughter of Gerald D. and Bourassa's political fixer in the Quebec Ministry of Justice), may have had discussions with the Chief Prosecutor in Hull, about the Gravel case. (Later Premier Rene Levesque's son would rescue Senator Michel Cogger). Witty also stated "if I had a sworn statement from Michel Gravel I would have laid charges against LaSale". (When he subsequently received such a statement Witty still did not lay charges).

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:52 AM

 

Witty testified that he carried out a nine month long RCMP investigation, because he believed in the accusation that Bernard Roy, Mulroney's Chief of Staff, had "trafficked in influence", during the negotiations that led to a lease renewal for J-P Tessier, the owner of Place Vincent Massey. (The rent had tripled, even though there remained seven years still to run in the existing lease and, that the Government owned a very favourable "option to purchase" clause, which was not renewed in the new lease. (Dropping this cluase from the new lease transferred equity in the building of approximately $50-80 million, from the Government to the owner). Inspector Witty testified that he could find "no motive", although knew roy had been Tessier's own incorporation lawyer, in "private life". Also, that the Assistant Deputy Minister, Andre Perrier, had prepared "the purchase order" and recommended against the new lease. This sort of activity, Witty said, was "not a unique case, this was done across Canada" (the Federal Government alone, now leases space in more than 5,000 buildings, in Canada.) Although the evidence was clear, that the pressure on Roch LaSalle to complete this deal and, another scheme as well, known as Le Bourg du Fleuve in Trois-Rivieres involving the same people, had originated from Bernard Roy himself, Inspector JP Witty never once questioned Roy, during the entire 9 month investigation.

 

- Witty testified that, in the spring of 1985, former Premier of Newfoundland Frank Moores a personal friendnd of the Prime Minister [Mulroney], had formed a company in which he was associated with Craig Dobbin, a Newfoundland millionaire, and JP Tessier of Montreal (owner of Place Vincent Massey and Bernard Roy's friend - see above). They both had attempted to purchase two new, but to date, still empty buildings; Place Louis St. Laurent - from Pierre Bourques, and 50 O'Conner - from Metroolitan Life Insurance. On the one hand Bernard roy, through his intermediary P-C Nolin, the then Chief of Staff at Public Works Canada, would stop the potential tenants from taking up residence in the buildings in question, while on the other hand, approaches were being made to the owners (who by this time, and to the buyers benefit, would find themselves in a tight financial bind). Offers to purchase these properties were presented (80 million was offered for 50 O'Connor - also see role of lawyer Gary Smith, later found dead, after "falling" face first into the bottom of his empty swimming pool). When later, because of ongoing RCMP investigations, their preferred plan fell through, they would apparently instinctively move to a back-up scheme, the owners had hired the same lobbyists to assist them find suitable, high-paying government tenants for these buildings (see list - Tenants 50 O'Connor; and the expensive leasing arrangements entered into by the government at Place Louis St. Laurent). Many of these same lobbying firms, along with their contractor-clients, have as well, "coincientally", taken up space in the same O'Connor building (makes one wonder who pays rent)

 

- Witty testified to having "some knowledge" of Senator Guy Charbonneau's role, linking him to a "secret PC" bank account at the Imperial Bank of Commerce on Dorchester Blvd., in Montreal. He described Senator Charbonneau as a "fundraiser".

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:53 AM

Highlights of TESTIMONY before JP LYNN COULTER

 

Emillien Maille (former RCMP "agent")

 

- Maille knew of Michel Deschne's role at National Defence, in support of Roch LaSalle, and of his dislike for P-C Nolin, whom he planned to "get rid of". Mrs. Deschenes was Gravel's secretary. She spoke of a "Plot".

 

- Maille was hired by PROVIGO and MEDI-SERVICE, 1986-88.

 

- Maille's contract included a commission of 3/4% on food and 1% on medical supplies, on all sales to government and institutions.

 

- Senator Guy Charbonneau's secretary was the wife of Michel Laurent, the President of Medi-Service (PROVIGO). Mr. Laurent once suggest that Senator Charbonneau was certain to be arrested, if the RCMP ever raided his wife's files, which were located at their home.

 

- Maille stated Gravel called daily to say "your business is coming", but it never arrived.

 

- Maille dissatisfied with lack of business complained first to Gerald Pichette the riding president and then on Dec. 5, 1985, to P-C Nolin.

 

- Maille interviewed in early 1986, by RCMP Inspector Witty and Sergeant Berube, decided to cooperate. He "turned state's evidence" and agreed to become an unpaid RCMP "SECRET AGENT".

 

- Maille did such a good job that he became "one of the boys" at the RCMP.

 

- Maille gave the RCMP a lead on Brian Mulroney's 1983 debt to the Talisman Motor Inn. $125,000 had remained unpaid until the lease at Place Vincent Massey had been renegotiated before its time, on orders from the PMO.

Andre Perrier ADM at DPW had recommended the activation of the "purchase Option" instead, but the mandarin was over-ruled by the PMO.

 

- Maille heard J-P Tessier, owner of Place Vincent Massey, say that he had given Pierre Bourques, the owner of Place Louis St. Laurent, a helping hand with B. Roy at the PMO, "to help him get a lease". Mr. Tessier died suddenly, of a "burst appendix", during the Quebec hospital strike.

 

- Maille testified about a "GAP" in the RCMP tape recordings.

 

- Maille described the corruption, as well as the sources of illegal income earned by the mayor of Hull (1992) Marcel Beaudry (NCC Chairman) and of former (1970's) Quebec Treasury Board President, Oswald Parent, including the Swiss bank accounts managed by Maurice Marois' (a Hull Quebec Bourassa-Mulroney fundraiser) daughter. Both Beaudry ad Parent, were targets of the Quebec Commision on Organized Crime (CECO) in the 1970's, but they escaped prosectuion when Judge Dionne was compromised by strippers, in his Hull, Quebec hotel room, on the night before they were to be named publicly. The "Independent Prosecutor" also had his legs broken in Montreal. Mr. ANdre Frechette, the owner of the LIDO strip-club was the LINK. The CECO crime commission was subsequently "called off".

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:55 AM

http://library.usask.../2001/0232.html

 

I just watched former Prime Minister Joe Clark on CTV news preaching about

the public "right to know" and particularly the right to know about "Shawinigate" and details of current Prime Minister Chretien's

involvement. Shouldn't he clean up his own house first? Ca. 1990

Ottawa-Hull developer Glen Kealey went before JP Lynn Coulter to present

evidence that then-Prime Minister Mulroney (and still good friend of Joe

Clark) was involved in a kick-back scheme using his Cabinet as "bag men".

It was Public Works Minister Roc Lasalle who had asked Kealey for a 5%

kick-back on a Kealey development. And according to the information

disclosed by Kealey, former Cabinet Minister Suzanne Blais Grenais had

testified before JP Coulter, under oath, that the PMO was fully cognizant

of these kick backs; that Mulroney was orchestrating them and funneling

the money into bank accounts in Luxembourg. Given that Lasalle was

eventually turfed out of office for corruption, given the Airbus disclosures, don't you think that the citizens of Canada have a "right to know" EXACTLY what transpired before JP Coulter? All it takes is release of the official transcripts.

FWP

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:56 AM

 

Politicians have had too much power over the police, especially when it comes down to the investigation of politicians. This is not just a problem in Metro Toronto. One only has look at what has happened in Ottawa since the Conservatives took over in 1984 to appreciate the dilemma in which police find themselves.

 

Take the case of Hull businessman Glen Kealey, for example, who is quoted above. You may recall that Kealey, a Tory riding association president, was in business as a contractor when he says he was asked to pay a bribe to a Tory cabinet minister before he would get a multi-million-dollar building contract.

Kealey refused to pay the money, lost the contract and went on a campaign to expose corruption on Parliament Hill. His complaints were long ignored by the media and the police.

 

Kealey began picketing outside the Commons, where he jokingly referred to himself as an "outdoor lobbyist." He was there Christmas Eve, 1989, when Prime Minister Brian Mulroney came out the door and wished him a Merry Christmas. Kealey's reply was typically to the point: "No, it will be a Merry Christmas when they close the cell door behind you."

 

Since then Kealey has mounted his own private prosecution of the Tories, because government wouldn't. Last year, he went before Ottawa Justice of the Peace Lynn Coulter and laid charges of corruption and conspiracy against 13 prominent Tories and the three highest ranking Mounties, including Commissioner Norman Inkster.

 

As Kealey rightly pointed out in his speech in Toronto to the Libertarian Party, the charges were properly laid by Coulter only after she heard there was sufficient evidence against each party to mount such an action.

That is the way our judicial system is supposed to operate.

 

Two months after Coulter laid the charges, Ontario's chief of criminal prosecutions withdrew the charges against 15 of the 16 accused and instead launched a special investigation by the OPP.

 

Kealey, whose two-hour speech riveted all who heard it, is despondent that the OPP investigation of the criminal activities on Parliament Hill is going nowhere.

He thinks the politicians will manipulate the OPP into silence, but maybe he is mistaken.

www.eye.net/eye/issue/issue_06.18.92/news/cit0618.htm

Posted 22 January 2006 - 05:58 AM

CANADA's REPUBLICAN GUARD~!

 

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Canada's own version of Iraq's Republican Guard, today vindicated former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney of corruption, following a thirteen year investigation.

 

The RCMP (Royal Canadian Mason Police) have always done a better job at entertaining kids, by running their horses around in circles and figure eights, than they ever have in successfully investigating corrupt politicians. This is why they are being promoted by Walt Disney.

 

They are Canada's version of Baghdad Bob, Iraq's former Minister of Communications, Mohammed al Sahaf.

 

Oh well, Regime Change is the only hope left for Canada~!

 

The SculPTor

www.kealey.net

 

The SculPTor

 

Posted: 3:54 AM

-------------

 

Tuesday, April 22, 2003

Posted 22 January 2006 - 06:01 AM

http://www.kealey.ne...01_archive.html

 

POLITICIANS LIE BECAUSE THAT'S THEIR JOB

 

Republicans lie to you about the things they learn in secret that you know nothing about.

 

Democrats also lie to you about things that are obvious to you because they believe that you are stupid enough to believe them.

 

SEE "PARLE.MENT", WHICH IS FRENCH FOR "SPEAK LIES".

 

In fact neither believes in or cares what you think.

 

They care only that you continue to pay taxes to Yale's Skull and Bones, the middle-Eastern suzerain TOLLGATING AYATOLLAH TAX COLLECTORS to which they are both beholden for their above average life styles.

 

 

The SculPTor

 

Posted: 4:17 PM

 

FROM GLEN KEALEY'S ARCHIVES

 

"Who was GLEN KEALEY?"

 

Everyone I meet today still ask me about how it was that I managed to have the three top RCMP Commissioners charged with corruption by an Ottawa court in 1991, and what happened to them and to the four Senators, the four Cabinet ministers and former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Chief of Staff who were charged, simultaneously, with conspiracy to commit fraud upon the Canadian people. The following is a synopsis of how I came to be involved and the 15-year investigation I undertook that followed.

 

In 1959 I began a 14 year career with Gestetner Canada, a British firm that manufactured and sold duplicating/ copying equipment worldwide. After spending time on service and customer relations in Toronto, I was promoted to sales and then sales management, in Montreal and Ottawa.

 

I left Gestetner in 1973 to open a company of my own called Safari Office Products and operated it for a year and a half. Lacking challenge doing this I had stints managing the sale of printing and typesetting equipment and then ran a couple of copy centre operations of which I was part owner. It was in one of these businesses that I conceived the Micot project, a $160 million "Intelligent Building Complex". This was in 1981, long before the advent of the Internet. I put together a fund-raising program that raised the interest of bridge financing partners. Together we then raised a firm commitment for the $160 million construction cost (from blue chip pension funds) of MICOT, the Hotel/Office/ Showroom/Convention/Retail/Education "city-within-a-city" to be constructed on a 200,000 sq. ft. site directly across the Ottawa river from Parliament Hill. It would enclose 1.5 million square feet of "intelligent space" (pre-wired on a ten foot grid for computers and communications) and the two towers would rise to 24 stories.

 

After acquiring the land from a school board and building a replacement school worth $3.6 million, the MICOT project (Manager's Institute of Communicating Office Technologies) was ready to proceed. In 1986, letters of Intent suggested that the project would be fully rented prior to opening day (3 years for construction) and that my remaining shares would then be worth $23 million; with further projected personal income amounting to more than $1 million annually. This is when I was approached by the Mulroney Tory government (by Roch LaSalle, the then Minister of Public Works) who requested that I pay the Tories 5% of the cost of the project ($8 million), plus a $5,000 messenger fee for himself personally. I refused outright, and subsequently the Tories, due to their secret insider Masonic contacts, took actions that then prevented the confirmed financing from going ahead.

 

That is when I realised that I, in fact, must have lied to my children, as had my own care-givers lied to me, when I had led them to believe that in Canada we lived in "a democratic country ruled by law". I then understood that, to the contrary, we live in "a fascist country ruled by criminals" and I vowed that sometime before I died, I needed to get to the bottom of this newly arrived at understanding.

 

To make a long story shorter let me just state that the Minister of Public Works's secretary had contacted me at my office and asked me to meet with LaSalle, at Nate's Restaurant, in Ottawa, for breakfast. Once there, LaSalle stated "the time has come for the Government to help your project ...and that will take some money." After a brief sales pitch made to me by LaSalle, on how lucky I was to be dealing directly with him as opposed to dealing through a third party, and with emphasis being placed on the fact that help would come my way as soon as I paid his up-front courier fee of $5000 cash (known in sales as "closing on a minor point"), he sat back and waited for my response.

 

When I said "no way", that I would never pay a bribe and then also reminded him that our project was not a government project; that it was private sector in its function, and also, that immediately it would create 5,000 jobs for which he could take credit, LaSalle laughed and restated "when you're ready for your project to go ahead, call my secretary and bring the money to our next meeting". (Later, I offered, took, and passed, a 3.5-hour polygraph test administered to me by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, based on the events that had transpired at this meeting).

 

I then proceeded to my office where, by phone to Montreal, I informed my two partners, the financier and the architect. Both suggested that I might have been a little rash in turning him down (my own business experience was in technology and printing; theirs was in the construction industry of which I knew nothing). No matter, I was the President of the project and, as a result of our Unanimous Shareholders Agreement, my partners could not act against my wishes without breaching our contract.

 

Later, they tried to steal control of the project away from me, but lost in the courts; the resulting publicity causing the project to die before its construction. However, they did make a large profit on the sale of the land to Bell Canada.

 

When this bribe request first occurred I had put it down to the actions of a lone crook who happened to be in political office. After completing my investigation of all the facts surrounding the request for a bribe (5 years), I presented all of the evidence confirming the existence of a vast criminal conspiracy which I had compiled to a criminal court in Ottawa. The court agreed with me that the problem was systemic. Immediately warrants were issued for 16 people, including: a) the top 3 Commissioners of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (ceasing and limiting police investigations of a political nature);

the Prime Minister's Chief of Staff; c) 4 Top Senators; d) 4 Cabinet Ministers (called Secretaries in the USA) and other backroom flunkies, (all for Fraud upon the Government).

 

However, once backroom Masons in the Just-us Department got involved, only 1 Senator was eventually sent to trial (Senator Cogger was eventually found guilty), while the rest scattered like the rats they were, on former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's sinking political battleship. Most of the corrupt cops then went to work as auditors, either for banks or accounting firms (a la Arthur Andersen).

 

My first suspicion that Freemasonry was somehow involved came to me as a result of an interview I did with the National Editor of the Toronto Globe and Mail, Paul Polango, in my home-office, in 1991. His interest in the role that Freemasonry had played, or not played, in my investigation which led to charges of "ceasing and limiting police investigations" being laid by the court in Ottawa against the top three Commissioners of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police had sparked my interest in Masons.

 

Later, following my first sleep-over at the home of the then Globe reporter Stevie (Stephanie) Cameron, done at her invitation in order to fill her in on my knowledge of corruption during the Mulroney years, I was intrigued by the role that her husband had played in writing the unconstitutional Meech Lake Accord, on behalf of the same politicians that Stevie was, purportedly, investigating. As well, Stevie's holidays in a villa in the south of France also piqued my curiosity.

 

Finally, the contacts that I had made during my years in business and subsequent to my faxing campaign to the then 91 Embassies in Ottawa during the Gustafson Lake native/Privy Council/ Rockefeller/media standoff in British Columbia, helped me to further understand the "missing links" in my ongoing research into The Grand Canal massive water diversion project, and former Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's employment by the world's first food cartel led by Archer Daniels Midland (ADM). ADM is the original spelling of the name Adam. It is Freemasonry's code word, along with "dyke", meaning "containing the flow and diverting" from the original.

 

As a result of all of the evidence discerned from the above, Freemasonry became my prime suspect. Furthermore, my personal contacts with MLA Gilles Rocheleau, the former mayor of Hull, Quebec, who later became the Minister for Public Security for the Province of Quebec, helped me to understand the links that existed between English Freemasonry and the French Jacobins. When alive, Rocheleau's restaurant in Hull (across the river from Ottawa) was called Le Bocage, which phonetically converts to Jacob when read backwards. This name conforms to the rules, or principles, of coding and decoding used by Zoroastrian Freemasonry.

 

The rest was all reader-analyst type "police work" on my part.

 

As a result of my 15 year investigation I have no problem believing that all politicians and all political parties are in fact "Cosmetic Leaders" who take the "public heat" created by the corrupt system's premier "Character Assassins" and opinion makers called the Media. Politicians don't now, nor have they ever run the country themselves. In Canada, they simply follow the instructions of Freemasonry which are sent to them through the Privy Council. Priests of Zoroastrian Freemasonry, with the assistance of their "character assassins" called the Media, benefit most in the short run from this systemic corrupt conspiracy.

 

Glen EP Kealey, National President,

Canadian Institute for Political Integrity

Tel. (613) 258-2893. Email : GEPK908cipi@gmail.com

The SculPTor 

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 4:08 PM

 

 

SATURDAY, JULY 28, 2018

Regarding the $800.00 CRA has stolen from Glen Kealey

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2018/07/from-jennifer-ann-kealey-date-july-28.html?m=1

From: Jennifer Ann Kealey
Date: July 28, 2018 at 9:44:07 AM PDT
To: bob.hamilton@canada.cajustin.trudeau@parl.gc.ca
Subject: Regarding the $800.00 CRA has stolen from Glen Kealey

Sir;

I am the wife of Glen Kealey; my name is Jennifer Ann Kealey, and I am living in the United States after being illegally deported there by the CBSA after IRB judge Francois Milo ordered that I was NOT TO BE DEPORTED ( on video of which our CIPI investigators have now obtained a copy that has been filed with the PINEAL COURT as evidence)
I understand that CRA was also involved in the criminal activities against me. Our Canadian Institute for Political Integrity investigators have been tracking and taking down the names of all CRA bureaucrat employees involved in criminal activities leveled against my husband and myself for years. Charges will be laid, rest assured.
Now to the reason for my email to you. My husband Glen Kealey continues to await the return of $830.00 illegally removed from his monthly “guaranteed “ old age security monthly deposit by those who sent him a letter the week before the money was deposited on Friday, July 27, 2018. Those who removed the $800.00 had the nerve to start the letter as, “WE have decided...”
I ask you now, since you will be held accountable for these actions, who do you think YOU are, to do this to a 76 year old senior citizen that you made sure was without his wife, without electricity (no running water, no working toilet, no way to bathe or take a shower, no refrigerator, no way to heat up or cook food, no heat in the winter, no fan or possibility of air conditioning in the summer), and you stole and withheld his $5000.00 in 2006 and which you owe plus interest accrued for every day you do not return it ?
Now you state in a letter that the $830.00 will be “returned retroactively” WHEN EXACTLY WILL THAT BE? Do you mean the same as the $5000.00 stolen in 2006 and since decided it will not be paid back? IS THAT WHAT YOU MEAN?
I repeat, WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE?

Mrs. Jennifer Ann Kealey

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/?m=1

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 12:35 PM

 

SUNDAY, JULY 29, 2018

DERELICTION OF DUTY

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2018/07/dereliction-of-duty.html?m=1

God Promised Us War Pestilence Famine And Disease

Creation In Turn Promises Us Respectful Reciprocity 

I don’t quite know what that all entails but our latest member of parliament, Gord Brown, died in his Ottawa office recently. In 2015 he had not returned my phone call when CBSA kidnapped and illegally deported my wife Jennifer. Gord was 57 years young when he died this year.

Creation is a process, not a person.

Glen Kealey

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 10:06 AM

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 23, 2017

WARNING TO ALL BUREAUCRATS QUANTUM DISENTANGLEMENT

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2017/12/warning-to-all-bureaucrats-quantum.html?m=1

Your God promises you war, pestilence, famine, and disease before the end of this life.

CREATION promises you 30 days times the number of people you have inconvenienced in its new island prison complex off Antarctica in the next....

CELL INVESTIGATIONS UNLIMITED

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 9:01 AM

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 2018

Posted in the CBC

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2018/06/posted-in-cbc.html?m=1

Posted in the CBC 

37 comments

U.S. quits UN Human Rights Council, accusing it of 'hypocrisy'

Washington alleges 47-member group is biased against Israel

The Associated Press · Posted: Jun 19, 2018 4:26 PM ET | Last Updated: an hour ago

Content disabled.

  • Jennifer Ann Kealey

The bureaucRATS that make up the UN are hypocrites and control-freaks. The UN imposes their sanctions and regulations on “participating countries” which are against established constitutions of individual countries. If each country’s bureaucrats work with the UN to override their own country’s policies to favor the UN rules/policies, that is called TREASON.

The UN decides who actually gets into other countries as migrants and refugees, based NOT upon need or lives in danger, but upon their DNA. Canada’s bureaucratic agenda is right alongside the UN agenda in this. The first thing Canada wants from those seeking entry is blood samples to check DNA. Only those with specific DNA are allowed to stay. The rest are deported.

ALL COMMENTS KNOCKING THE U.S. ALLOWED. ANY COMMENT CONTAINING THE TRUTH NOT ALLOWED.

CREATION will allow a cleansing of bureaucrats who have made a complete mess of North America by their own bosses who have determined their roles have reached the maximum potential of service.

 

PROMOTIONS AND PATRONAGE-  WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2017

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2017/11/promotions-and-patronage_22.html?m=1

A worldwide police, media and court protected fraud against lone senior citizens which is being perpetrated by bureaucrats in all countries of the world, mostly for the benefit of United Nations (U.N.) bureaucrats, is now being investigated by “The Cell”.

 

As a result, a vast system of “Island Prisons” is planned for Antarctica.

Bureaucrats, of government or corporations and agencies who participate will suffer the consequences.

The Cell

Cell Investigations Unlimited

ADDENDUM : currently the CELL INVESTIGATIONS UNLIMITED are posting stakeouts at the following :

Bell Canada

Ontario Hydro/ Hydro One

Inside Postal Workers

Canadian Border Security Agency

Canada Revenue Agency

Western Union

United Appeal - Simcoe

H&R Block

Immigration Refugee Board of Canada

Ontario Legal Aid

Justice Canada

City of Brockville Court and Police

McCain Family Trust

United Parcel Service/ UPS

Please note that other likely suspects will be added later as the 27 team investigation moves forward in their own stakeouts....

More to follow....

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ADDENDUM:

CELL INVESTIGATIONS OF BUREAUCRATS

The crimes and misprision of crimes listed below, but not limited to those listed are among those where guilt would earn a sentence in Antarctica for an extended period of time.

High Treason

Misprision of High Treason

Treason against Canada

Misprision of Treason Against Canada

Genocide

Misprision of Genocide

Fraud

Misprision of Fraud

Money Laundering

Misprision of Money Laundering

Dereliction of Duty Causing Death

The Purchase or Sale of Political Favor

Aiding and Abetting Any of The Above

More to Follow.........

 

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 2017

PROMOTIONS AND PATRONAGE

http://antinewworldorder.blogspot.com/2017/11/promotions-and-patronage.html?m=1

A worldwide police, media and court protected fraud against lone senior citizens which is being perpetrated by bureaucrats in all countries of the world, mostly for the benefit of United Nations (U.N.) bureaucrats, is now being investigated by “The Cell”.

As a result, a vast system of “Island Prisons” is planned for Antarctica.

Bureaucrats, of government or corporations and agencies who participate will suffer the consequences.

The Cell
Cell Investigations Unlimited

Jerd Guillaume-Sam at 9:32 AM

PROMOTIONS AND PATRONAGE-  WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 2017

 


100 Best things to do Hawaii

by J Rogers

Your RVF Lifestyle

RV Road Trip

RV-ing around the world

RV Road Trip

https://www.your-rv-lifestyle.com/best-things-to-do-in-hawaii/

Volcanic archipelago is one of the states of the USA. The islands are mostly known for the rugged beauty, tropical areas, and magnificent beaches. There are six main islands, with the capital Honolulu being situated in the island of Oahu. The islands offer many different things for the tourist, ranging from WWII memorials to tropical walks, scuba diving, snorkelling, and mountainous excursions.

1. Pearl Harbour

You will find this lagoon harbour on the island of Oahu. A large part of the harbour is US Navy deep-water naval base, although you can still spend a full day looking around the area.
It was here with the attack on Pearl harbour on December 7th, 1941 which was the reason for the USA to enter WWII.
Allow yourself a full day but be aware that there are areas which you cannot enter so be vigilant of signs.

2. Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum

This is the state museum of the country. It is the Museum of natural and Cultural History. You will find it in the Kalihi area of the main island.
This is the largest museum and houses the largest collection of Polynesian artefacts and history specimens. The natural history section has over 24 million exhibits and houses the third largest insect collection in the USA.
Allow yourself a full day here.

3. Kilauea

This is the most active volcano of the five that form the island of Hawaii. You will find it on the southern shore of the island. This is a very popular tourist attraction with over 2.6 million visitors each year who walk up the volcano.
You will find a well-stocked tourist shop, and if you want to stay in the area, then look out for The Volcano House which is the nearest accommodation.
If you plan to stay, then be sure to book in advance.

4. Hanauma

This is both a nature reserve and a marine life conservation area. There are many animals for you to see but be aware that you are not allowed to pet or feed them.
There are over 400 species of fish who live in the bay area, as well as an abundance of sea turtles and parrotfish.
Snorkelling is the best way to see the marine life, and it is a lovely area to spend a full day.

5. Turtle Bay Resort

This is the major hotel which you will find on the north shore of Oahu. This is a great place to base yourself and explore the island. There are rooms as well as cottages and ocean villas.
There are several restaurants in the resort, including a pool bar which is very popular.
If you play golf, then you will find two golf courses next to the resort.
Make sure you book accommodation in advance.

6. The Hana Highway and Legacy Trail

You will find this in East Maui, it connects the towns of Kahului and Hana and is about 52 miles long.
It will take you about 2.5 hours to drive it and you will cross over some 59 bridges, many of which are one lane wide.
You will pass through lush forest and you can also find the Hana Millennium Legacy Trail which is a great hiking area.
Plan to spend a day exploring from one end and perhaps staying in the destination for a night or two.

7. Manoa Falls

For walkers and hikers, this is a great trail. The waterfall is 150-foot high and located on the Manoa Falls Trail in Honolulu.
Close by you will find the Lyon Arboretum which preserves many species of native plants.
Make sure you getdirections for the trail before you leave.
Swimming at the base of the waterfall is not advised and you should be prepared for flooding after rain, so be sure to check forecasts before setting out.

8. Aulani

This Disney Resort and Spa is a great beachside hotel and is perfect for families. You will find many programmes and children’s activities here, while mum and dad do grown-up things.
Look out for fellow guests such as Mickey and Minnie Mouse!
This is a great place to spend a few days and use as a base to explore the area.

9. Sunset Beach

If you like surfing, then you should make this a place to visit. You will find it on the north shore of Oahu. It is well known for big waves during the winter.
The beach is not considered safe for beginners due to the coral formations at the surface of the water which could present a risk of injury.
Swimming is possible along the beach, there are several spots where you will be secluded. The creamy sand is great to take long walks along while watching the many surfers who come here.

10. Hanalei Bay

This is the largest bay on the north shore of Kaua?i island. You will find the town of Hanalei in the centre of the bay.
The bay has over 2 miles of beaches and is very popular in the summer for sailboats, paddle boarding and swimming.
During the winter the waves increase, and this becomes a surfer’s paradise.
Allow yourself a full day here to see the town, and then head for the beach.

11. Lahaina

This historic whaling village is in Maui, on the west side. The name means ‘relentless sun’. During the mid-1800’s the town was overrun by sailors, although these days you will find quaint shops and art galleries.
Make sure you check out Maui’s oldest living Banyan tree and some of the many other historic sites.
You can hire canoes, or hike with local guides, and learn more about the history of the area.
Note that the channel off the coast is one of the best places in the world to spot hump-backed whales.

12. Diamond Head

This is the view that most people will first see when visiting the island of Waikiki, and it is also a
US National Natural Monument.
Be aware that there is a section which is closed to the public, but the resort hotels and wonderful beaches make this a great tourist destination.
For hikers there is a 0.75-mile trail which will take you to the rim of the crater. This is not rated as a difficult hike, but you will find that the trail winds over very uneven rocky places. There is a tunnel which will take you to a narrow spiral staircase which has 43 steps, and finally you will arrive at an observation platform.
There is a water fountain at the observation platform, as well as bathrooms, but there is no food.
One point to note here is that you are not allowed up to the top after 4.30pm, so plan your hike accordingly.

13. USS Arizona Memorial

This memorial marks the place where 1,102 sailors were killed on USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbour.
You can only reach this by boat, and the memorial straddles the sunken hull of the ship. There is a visitor’s Centre which organises boat trips.
The memorial centre is open daily apart from Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s day.
You should allow yourself at least a half day to see this, although you may take longer looking around the area.

14. The Honolulu Zoo

This zoo houses over 1,230 different animals, each in their own specifically designed habitat.
Look out for monkeys, a sun bear, and several lion cubs.
An interesting point here is that in 1916 a steamship going from Australia to Canada docked in Honolulu, with an elephant called Daisy on board. Honolulu acquired the elephant, and that was the start of the zoo!
Plan on spending most of the day here, there are cafes, where you can get a bite to eat.

15. Mount Tantalus

This is called an extinct cinder cone and it is found on the southern part of Oahu. Tantalus is a very popular attraction for hikers, bikers and even skateboarders. The view from the summit is down onto Honolulu City.
The mountain is 2,013 feet high so if you intend to hike it, be sure to take enough water.
Allow yourself most of the day, particularly if you are an avid hiker.

16. Pacific Aviation Museum

You will be able to access this museum from the Pearl Harbour Historic Sites on Halawa landing. It was founded in 1999 as an aviation museum.
Look out for hangar number 37, where you will see many artefacts relating to the attack on Pearl Harbour.
There are several static exhibits and one of the hangars still shows the damage from the attack.
Plan on spending the full day here and looking at the other things related to Pearl Harbour.

17. Ala Moana Beach Park

This free public park was man-made by the owner of a dredging company who needed somewhere to dispose of the earth he dredged, and so the beach was created.
You will find that the beach is perfect for smaller children as the water is always calmer, being protected by an outer reef.
One point to note here is that the ocean bottom does drop away rapidly so novice swimmers should take care.
This is a great area to pack a picnic basket and spend a day. There are lifeguards, showers, restrooms, and a barbeque area.

18. Camp on Big Island

This is in fact one of the best ways to see this island. You can camp in many places on the island, and all are sign-posted. Most campsites require you to have a permit so be sure to get one before you head out.
The rules are basically the same at each sit – treat the area with respect and enjoy your stay!

19. Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

You will find this park on the island of Hawaii. It comprises of two of the world’s most active volcanoes, as well as Mauna Loa, the most massive shield volcano in the world.
You will be able to see amazing volcanic landscapes as well as some rare fauna and flora. Pack a good pair of walking shoes and spend a day exploring. Be sure to take your own provisions.

20. Visit the turtles

You will find this amazing sight at Ho’okipa Beach Park. Every single sunset, no matter what the time of year the sea turtles swim ashore here to rest.
Head for the east end of the beach at the base of the cliff and you will find between 20 and 40 at any time.
Please be aware that touching or feeding is not allowed.
Plan to spend a day on the beach and enjoy the surroundings.
Further down the beach you will find activities such as surfing, kitesurfing, and windsurfing, and you are also able to snorkel with the turtles.

21. Pu-ukohola Heiau National Historic Site

You will find this on the north-western coast of the island of Hawaii. Here you will find the ancient ruins of the last major Hawaiian Temple, along with several other historic sites.
There is a visitor’s centre at the site, and a trail which leads to Pu?ukohola. Be aware that there is a section where the public is not allowed as it is widely believed that there are still bones buried there.
Look out for the underwater structure dedicated to sharks, and a stone post where you will be able to watch them feeding.

22. USS Bowfin

You will find this submarine located next to the USS Arizona memorial Visitor’s Centre in Pearl Harbour.
She has been open to the public since 1981. There are tours you can take or you can walk around by yourself.
Whichever you choose, be sure to wear sturdy shoes as there is quite a lot of climbing to get in and out of the submarine.

23. See the only Meadery

The Meadery is located in Kapa’a Town and is close to many other iconic shops.
Mead is regarded as the world’s first alcoholic drink. The Nani Moon Meadery makes several flavoured meads. Each variety is made using only local ingredients and fruits, so you may get to taste lilikoi and guava, spiced with ginger or chili.
The Meadery offers a guided tour where you are invited to taste their mead. You will find that far from being thick and cloying, it is light and refreshing!

24. Queen Kapi?olani Regional Park

This is the largest and second oldest public park in the country. It is found in Honolulu on the east side. It was named after the Queen Consort of King David Kalakaua. Here you will also find Honolulu Zoo, and Waikiki Shell.
There are many outdoor events which take place here such as tennis, basketball, baseball, rugby, and lacrosse to name a few.
This is a great park for joggers as well as serving as the start and finish of the off-road races which are held there.
You will also be able to watch a game of cricket. This is the oldest sporting club in the Pacific.

25. Black Sand Beach

This is a ‘one-of-a-kind’ wonder which used to be known as Punalu?u Beach. You will find it on Hawaii’s Big Island.
You will notice straight away that the sand is black. This is due to the basalt washing up from beneath the waters.
Look out for lava vents which spurt out magna into the ocean and fill the heated rock pools.
The area is home to the Hawkback Turtle and the Hawaiian Monk Seal, which you will see in profusion.
Allow yourself a day here to explore the beach and then enjoy the seals.

26. Honolulu Museum of Art

The museum was founded in 1922 and is the largest of its kind in the state. You will find the largest single collection of Asian and pan-Pacific art in the USA. There are more than 50,000 works of art housed here.
Some days and events are free to the public, so be sure to check these out. Otherwise, members go in free, as do children.
Take advantage of a guided tour, these are offered daily. The other choice is to have an audio guide. Tours are also offered for the hearing impaired. Plan to spend a full day here.

27. Iolani Palace

This used to be the royal residence of the rulers under the Kamehameha Dynasty and the Kalakaua Dynasty. You will find it in the capitol area of Honolulu. This is now a National Historic Landmark.

The palace was opened to the public in 1978 and is one of two royal abodes on US soil.
Allow yourself at least half a day to see the Palace.

28. USS Missouri

Also known as ‘Mighty Mo’, this battleship was named after the US State of Missouri. She was the last battleship to be commissioned by the US and was at the site of the surrender of the Empire of Japan, which marked the end of WWII.

In 1998 she was donated to the Memorial Association and took her place among others at Pearl harbour.
You can climb aboard and see how the crew lived, so wear sturdy shoes.
Allow yourself a full day to see this and several others, which are all in the vicinity.

29. Mauna Kea

This dormant volcano is found on the island of Hawaii. It stands 13,802 feet above sea level, and the summit is the highest point in the country.
An interesting point is that when measured from the base on the ocean floor, this is the highest mountain on earth.
This is one of the best sites for observing the stars at night, so if you are into astronomy, then be sure to check this out. There are no less than thirteen telescopes at various points up the volcano.

30. Hawaiian Volcano Observatory (HVO)

This observatory is located at Uwekahuna Bluff on the island of Hawaii and is there to monitor active volcanoes. This centre is known world-wide as the leader is the study of active volcanoes.
On site there is a museum, namely Thomas A. Jagger Museum, which is open to the public.
Allow yourself at least a half day here.

31. Helicopter over Kauai

Over 70% of this area is only accessible by helicopter and there are many tours you can join to do this.
You will find tour agencies close to Kalapaki Beach. There are two types of tour, one with the doors closed, and the other with the doors off. Doors off tours are not available for children under 10 years of age.
You will fly over areas such as Na Pali Coast, Mount Waialeale, and Jurassic Falls, with the most breath-taking views.
Tours last about an hour, some are 90 minutes long, and there is a safety brief before you fly.

32. Na Pali Coast State Park

You will find this along the northwest side of Kaua?i. An interesting point here is that this is the oldest inhabited Hawaiian Island.
The area is very rugged and runs for about 16 miles with the cliffs rising to as high as 4,000 feet in some areas.
This is perfect for hiking or walking, and you will find plenty of trails. Be aware that you must take your own provisions.

33. Shangri La

You will find this mansion just outside Honolulu. It was built by heiress Doris Duke and is now owned by the Doris Duke Foundation.

The house was opened to the public in 2002 as the Shangri La Centre off Islamic Arts and Culture.

You can join a guided to tour to see this, and they leave from the Museum of Art in Honolulu.
The house contains over 2,500 objects from her collection.
Allow yourself a half day to see the mansion.

34. National Memorial Cemetery of the Pacific

You may also hear this called the Punchbowl Cemetery, because it is located at Punchbowl Crater in Honolulu.
This is a memorial dedicated to those men and women who served in the US Air Forces, and gave their lives doing this.
This is one of the most popular tourist attractions in the country, with millions of visitors each year.
Allow yourself a half a day to see this.

35. Waikiki Aquarium

This aquarium was founded in 1904, and it is located in Honolulu. The aquarium is right next to a living coral reef on the shoreline. This is home to over 490 different species of plants and animals.
You can expect to see classes of schoolchildren on visits as there are several programmes for them to take part in, as well as activities for youngsters.
Make sure you check out upcoming events through the year.
Allow yourself a half day here, although with children you may take longer.

36. Harold L. Lyon Arboretum

This is managed by the University of Hawaii at Manoa. A large part of the arboretum consists of lowland tropical rainforest, and there are numerous small water features and trails you can follow.
There are over 15,000 plants of the palm family such as bromeliads and aroids.
Look out for the seed bank and visit it, where you will be able to see the latest in technology for seed reproduction.

37. The Polynesian Cultural Centre

You will find this near Brigham Young University in Laie. It is owed by the LDS Church, and consists of eight simulated villages.
Each village demonstrates various crafts and arts. There is a shuttle bus tour of the university which includes seeing the villages.
Allow a half day here, there is a visitor’s centre where you can get a bite to eat.

38. Ala Moana Centre

If shopping appeals to you then you need to head here! This is not only the largest shopping mall in Hawaii, it is also the 7th largest in the USA! Further, it is the largest open-air shopping centre in the world!
You will find this on Ala Moana Boulevard in Honolulu. Plan on spending a full day here as there is so much to see and do. Plenty of cafes and restaurants where you can stop for lunch.

39. Ko Olina Resort

This is a master-planned vacation centre with 2 miles of coastal frontage. You will find three natural and four man-made lagoons with sandy, white beaches.
There are a total of four hotel and club resorts, one of them being a Disney Resort and Spa.
During the year events such as the Children’s Film and Music Festival and the Hawaii Food and Wine Festival take place here.
This is a perfect place to book a few nights and stay while you enjoy the beautiful surroundings.

40. Akaka Falls

You will find this 442-foot high waterfall on the Big Island. The falls are fed by the Kolekole Stream and are a very popular spot for tourists.
While the area is lovely, the reason to visit here is the Goby Fish. The fish are normally less than 3″ ling but they literally climb up the wet rocks behind the falls to get to the spawning grounds. The eggs are laid up at the top of the falls and then get washed out back into the ocean where they will hatch and grow. And the cycle begins again..
This is a lovely spot to take a picnic and see if you can spot these amazing fish.

41. Go snorkeling

The best place to do this is in Maui where you will find boats to take you to interesting spots such as Molokini Crater.
Take your time and have a look around under the waves. You will be amazed at the amount of beauty below.
Here you will find some of the best places to go snorkelling.
Other great places to try are Honolua bay and Kekaa which is situated in front of the Sheraton in west Maui.

42. Pu-uhonua o Honaunau National Historical Park

You will find this historical park on the west coast of the island of Hawaii. A point of interest here is that you will find the site where up till the early 19th century anyone who broke the law could avoid death by fleeing to the place of refuge. There the offender would be absolved of his crime and be able to return home.
Outside the Great Wall you will see the grounds which is widely regarded to be the home of several generations of Chieftains.
It will take you at least a half day to see the park.

43. Maui Ocean Centre

This is both an aquarium and an oceanography centre. You will find it in Maalaea, on the island of Maui.
This is the largest tropical reef aquarium in the western hemisphere. You will see coral reef habitats, sharks, sea turtles and humpback whales, to mention a few.
The project undertakes growing of artificial coral reefs which are later introduced to the wild.
You will need at least half a day here.

44. Waipi-o Valley

This is on the Big Island of Hawaii. It was the permanent residence of many early kings there, as well as being the capitol.

The floor of the valley is 2,000 feet below the surrounding area, and there is a steep road which will lead you down to the bottom. You will need to get to the lookout at the top of the southern wall of the valley.

Be aware that only 4-wheel drive vehicles are permitted as the road is so steep in areas. In fact, it is the steepest road in the USA!

Notice that the shore line is of black sand. This is a very popular place for surfers.
If you want to hike there, then look for the foot trails named Waimanu or Muliwai. These are not accessible by vehicle.

45. Kapalua Resort

This golf and beach resort is to be found in Kapalua on the northwest shore. The resort is set between two nature preserves, and there are three wonderful beaches close by. Also in the vicinity is a zipline.
On the resort you will find several restaurants and shops. One of the well-known shops is the historic Honolua Store.
Vacation homes are available to rent, and tours arranged on the nearby pineapple farm.

46. Haleakala National Park

You will find this park on the island of Maui. There is a very winding but well-maintained road which leads to the summit. Here you will find a visitor’s centre, with restrooms and a parking area.
Look out for the observatory at the top. You will also be able to see the famous Haleakala Crater. This is 6.99 miles across.
Possibly the best reason to visit this area is the sunrise in the mornings, which is nothing short of spectacular.
For hikers, there are three cabins to stay in, but you must book them in advance.

47. Halona Blowhole

You will find this on the island of Oahu, at Halona Point. The geyser is best seen when the tide is high, and the winds are strong. Then you will see the spray shoot high into the air.
This is a very popular tourist attraction because the area is so beautiful. It is also a good place to watch Humpback whales as they start their journey leaving the north pacific.
Be aware if you plan to dive or even swim, that the currents are erratic and sometimes very strong.

48. Mauna Loa

The name means ‘Long Mountain’ and this is one of five volcanoes that form the Island of Hawaii. This is the largest one, and also regarded as the largest volcano on earth. It is estimated that this volcano has been erupting for at least 700,000 years.
Here you can read about the eruption history of this famous volcano.
There are many trails you can follow around the volcano. Make sure that you wear sturdy shoes and that you take enough provisions for your stay.

49. Hilton Hawaiian Village Beach Resort and Spa

This is possibly the most iconic hotel and resort in Honolulu and is the largest in the chain of Hilton Hotels. It is also one of the largest hotels in the world.
You will find many different areas such as lagoons and spas. Look out for the pond area where you will find the sacred Ibis, Koi fish, chameleons, and many other different species. Also check out the three remaining South African Black-footed penguins.
This resort is the perfect getaway for a family holiday.

50. Hale Pohaku

This is also known as the Onizuka Center for International Astronomy. It is a centre for telescopes and instruments for the Mauna Kea Observatory and you will find it on top of Mount Kea.
At the base there is a visitor’s centre. Here you can read about the geology, ecology, and significance of Mauna Kea.
In the evenings there is a stargazing program where several smaller telescopes are set up for visitors to look at planets and galaxies.
This area is very popular with amateur astronomers since the altitude is so much higher and the sky clear.

51. Sample Kalua Pig

A visit to Hawaii would not be complete without tasting some of this delicacy. It is a very famous pork dish which is cooked in an underground oven.
You will find that the pork is tender with the most remarkable smoky flavour. There are many places where you will be able to find this, so make sure you stop for lunch somewhere you can taste this delicious meat.

52. The Banzai Pipeline

You may also hear this called the Pipeline, or simply the Pipe. This is a surf reef located off Ehukai Beach park on the north shore of O’ahu.
The pipeline is notorious for big waves which start to break just as they reach the shallows. You will notice the large, thick, hollow curls which are formed, making them great tube rides.
There are three reefs, each one deeper than the previous one. If you intend to surf here, pay attention to the times when the locals are surfing as they know the tides and currents best.

53. Try some tropical fruit

There is something unique about buying fresh fruit from a roadside stand! You will never forget the taste of these unusual fruits. Try some lychee, mangoes, passion fruit, pineapple, or star fruit.
They can all be bought anywhere along a roadside, or in any of the farmer’s markets, which are held most weekends.
So, pack a picnic lunch, and add some fresh fruit for a great afternoon on a beach!

54. Hulihe-e Palace

This used to be a holiday home for Hawaiian royalty, although now it is a museum housing furniture and artefacts.

You will find it in Kailua-Kona. Notice that the original building was made from lava rock. There are guided tours available which explain the interesting history of the museum.
An interesting point to look for are the slight ceiling cracks which were caused by the 2006 Kiholo Bay earthquake.

Allow yourself a half day to look around here.

55. Waimea Bay

This bay is located on the north shore of O’ahu. The name means ‘reddish water’. This, along with several other bays play host to surfing contests because of the large waves created by the winter storms.
This beach was a huge influence on surfing in the 1950’s.
In summer the water is typically clear and calm, making it a great place for snorkelling and swimming.

56. Nu’uanu pali

This is a section of cliff located at the head of the Nu?uanu Valley, on the island of O’ahu. It is famous for the spectacular views of the coastline.
You will also find the Freshwater Fish Refuge here as well as the reservoir. Head for the Nu?uanu Pali State Wayside which is a lookout with wonderful views of Kane?ohe, Kane?ohe Bay, and Kailua.
This is a great place to take a break during a hike and enjoy the scenery.

57. Dive with the sharks

You will find this in Hale’iwa. It is an experience like no other! This is the first – and only – cage-less shark diving place in the country. It is a unique opportunity to see sharks in their natural environment.
There are no age restrictions although children must be at least 4 feet tall and accompanied by two adults. They should also be strong swimmers.
The tours last 2 hours, with 30-45 minutes being spent in the water. So, if you are brave enough to face a shark outside a cage, then make sure this is on your list of things to do.

58. Take a lava tour

The best way to see an active lava flow is to take a tour. These start within Volcanoes National park, and you will be able to get within a few feet of fresh lava. Your guide will take you to some of the less well-known areas of the forest.
With most tours, rainwear, snacks, and water are included. This hike is not for people who are unfit, or for small children as it is about 4 to 5 miles each way. Also, be aware that the fumes of the volcanoes are very pungent and may affect breathing in some people.
The tours start very early at 4am so that you catch the sunrise, and end between 9-10pm.

59. Explore Chinatown

You will find this area in Oahu. The area is filled with art galleries, bars, restaurants, trendy boutiques, and a vibrant art scene.
Look out for the Hawaiian Theatre, which is well worth a visit. There are guided tours you can take, although it is nice to wander around at your own pace.
Every first Friday of the month you will find a block party with shops and galleries staying open late, and live music in many bars.

60. See the Manta Rays

The best way to see these amazing creatures is to join a tour. You will find boats leaving from Kona Coast daily. Most tours last three hours and you can expect to see literally hundreds of rays going in search of plankton within inches of you. You can either dive or snorkel with the rays, and there is no age limit although six years and upwards is the recommendation.
Allow a full day out here as there is plenty to see on the shore as well as on a tour.

61. Visit Kona Coffee Farm

This is a great way for the whole family to learn about the coffee industry. You will find this at Kuaiwi Farm. You can take the guided tour across the 5-acre plantation.
Not only will you see coffee grown, but also macadamias, pineapples, and cacao.
You will be able to see the whole process of coffee-making and then have a tasting of the award-winning coffees, nuts, and jams.
The tours run every day between 8.30 and 4pm, Monday through Sunday.
As a bonus, there is a chocolate making class for guests over ten years of age.

62. Explore by submarine

This is a great way to see under the water, and not get wet! These tours start in Lahaina, and after a short safety briefing you will head out to see reef sharks, eels, dolphins, and tropical fish. You will pass a sunken wreck along the way.
This is the perfect way to see things for people who are not strong swimmers.
There is no age limit here, but there is a rule that guests must be taller than 36inches.

63. Hire a bike

The best two islands to do this on are Big Island and Maui. You will find plenty of bike rental companies at very affordable rates.
While most roads no not have designated bike lanes, you will find that they are wide enough for both vehicles and bikes.
Maui is particularly good with the infrastructure for bikes, making it very easy to explore the island this way.
If you can, try to take the downhill ride at sunset from the Haleakala Crater.

64. Visit Kualoa

This is a private nature reserve and a working cattle ranch. It is also very popular with tourists. You will find it on the windward coast of O’ahu.
There are three valleys where you can hike and explore. There are also guided tours of the farm.
An interesting point here is that the farm has been used in the making of many films such as Jurassic park, 50 First Dates, Jumanji, and many more.
Allow yourself a full day here to explore.

65. See Ahu’ena Heiau

You will also know this as Big Island. Historically significant because this island was home to the religious temple used by King Kamehameha the Great. It was this king who served to unite all the islands.
This was also the site where the first American Christian Missionaries landed. The site was restored after being damaged by a hurricane and is now free to the public.
Once there you will be able to visit Hulihe’e Palace. Allow yourself at least a half day here although you may want to stay longer as it is so restful.

66. Green Sands Beach

This may be off the beaten track, but it is worth the excursion. You will find Papakolea Beach near South Point, in the Ka?u district of the island of Hawaii.
The beach colouring gets the green shade from the green glassy crystals called Olivine. Olivine is quite heavy and does not get washed out to sea and regular beach sand does, so the shore keeps the greenish colour.
Make sure you wear shoes when walking on this.

67. Say hello to ‘Duke’

He is widely regarded as the father of modern surfing. He was also the Hawaiian ambassador of Aloha. You will find the 9-foot high bronze statue on the sands of Waikiki Beach.
Not only was Duke a gold medal Olympic swimmer, he was a Hollywood actor, and Sheriff of Honolulu.
This is one of the most photographed statues on the island and you will often find flowers draped on his arms by admirers.
Duke was a true hero in every sense of the word.
If you want to learn more about Duke, then head to Duke’s Canoe Club Restaurant.

68. Explore North Shore

The North Shore has plenty to offer and is well worth spending a full day looking around.
This is very popular with surfer’s as some of the best waves in the world happen here. On your way to the North Shore you will pass through the residential areas and fruit stands. You will also find shrimp trucks – treat yourself to a plate of garlic shrimp for lunch – you will love it!
If you fancy something different, try any of the old-school bakeries or burger joints.
You can snorkel in Three Tables and Shark’s Cove, or just spend a lazy day on the beach.

69. Waimea Canyon

You may have heard of this as the ‘Grand Canyon of the Pacific’. You will find it on the western side of Kaua?i in the Hawaiian Islands. The canyon is up to 3,000 feet deep in places and you will often see reddish water at the bottom.
There are guided tours which you can take, or you can walk about by yourself. Be aware that this is one of the wettest places on the earth so bring rain wear and be prepared to get rained on!

70. Try some ‘shave ice and poke’

‘Ono grinds’ – this means good food, and there are two that you must try! Both are local dishes, and both are delicious. Poke (rhymes with OK) is normally made with octopus or tuna, chopped into cubes, seasoned, and served raw. You will find this on the menu in every restaurant and café.
Shave ice is a dessert made by shaving pieces of ice from a large block. This is then topped with such things as condensed milk, vanilla or coconut ice cream, or plum powder, to mention a few.
These are two things that should most definitely be on your list of things to try!

71. Whale watch

If you are interested in seeing humpbacks, then head for Maui. This is where hundreds of whales return to every year. They come to the warm waters to give birth.
You may be able to see mother whales teaching their calves how to tail-wave. There are many tours here which you can take and get to listen to the whales. Most of the boats have hydrophone systems where you can hear all the sounds the whales make.
You will also be able to see the whales very well from the beach, if you prefer to stay on land.

72. Old Lahaina Luau

This is an evening to be remembered! Prepare to enjoy yourself and live like a local! Good Poke and a flower tucked behind your ear will set you up for an evening of entertainment.
Performances consist of different types of entertainment, with fire dancers on some occasions.
This is a great way to spend and evening, although you must book in advance as they are very popular with tourists.

73. See Makena

This is the south shore in Maui. Don’t expect to find supermarkets, hotels, or minimarts here. Rather, expect to find crystal clear water, and wonderful scenery.
You may be lucky to catch sight of a pod of dolphins as you laze on the deep, golden sands.
Normally there is a fish taco truck which arrives daily where you will be able to get a bite and something to drink.
This is a great place to relax and unwind after serious hiking or sightseeing.

74. Highway 560

This is a ten-mile stretch of road which starts at Hanalei scenic Overlook in Princeville. The road follows an ancient walking trail which skirts the ocean.
As you drive you will see thirteen historic bridges and culverts. Be aware that at places the road is only one lane wide, so be prepared to wait to pass, and try to enjoy the experience. Be patient!

75. Try some river kayaking

There are some rivers where even inexperience kayakers can try as there are no rapids to run, and no waterfalls to jump. That makes this a great way for most people to enjoy the scenery from the water.
There are plenty of rivers to kayak along, for both beginners and advanced kayakers.
For inexperienced kayakers, try Wailua River on the east side, or Hanalei River on the North Shore.
For more experienced kayakers, try heading for Napali Coast.

76. Listen to some ‘real’ Hawaiian Music

Israel Kamakawiwoole is widely regarded as the father of Hawaiian music, and you should try to listen to a live performance. Israel died in 1997, but his style and memory lives on. Head for the Maui Arts and Cultural centre for an evening you will not forget.
You will also get to hear his music in many bars and restaurants. Wednesday night at the Napili Kai Beach resort is an excellent venue.
If you are in the area during the Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar festival, you will be able to listen to performers who play the signature styles.

77. Kailua Beach

Some people will tell you that this is the reason to visit Hawaii, and when you see the beach, you may well agree with them. This is also the reason why many people have never left!
You will find this beach on the windward side of Oahu. There are several small offshore islands which are perfect for canoeing and kayaking.
You will notice that the waves are small and gentle, making this perfect for kids to romp in them.
There is a small store and some different eating places nearby, so you can plan on spending the whole day here.

78. Play golf in Paradise

If you enjoy golf, then bring your clubs! You will find some of the most beautiful golf courses in the world here. Not only will you have spectacular views while you play, but there is good weather all year round so you are guaranteed a game whenever you like.
Some of the courses can be challenging, they are all designed by top golfers. Try the Kapalua resort on West Maui, and the Wailwa and Makena resorts on the South Shore. Not only do they offer memorable courses, but they frequently have twilight deals to save money.

79. Makapuu Point Lighthouse

This is a moderately easy hike with a spectacular view at the end. You will find it on the eastern side of Oahu. The lighthouse was built in 1909 on a 600-foot cliff.
The beach is also well-known for some of the best body surfing conditions. Close by is the Sea Life Park, so it is worth spending a full day in this area.
For hikers, the parking lot leads to a 2-mile paved trail which overlooks the lighthouse.

80. Take a sunset cruise

One of the nicest ways to see Oahu is from a boat looking onto the island. There are many of sunset cruises which do this. They leave from Oahu and will serve you a romantic 5 course sunset dinner and show as you cruise along the coast line.
Watch out for the spectacular views of Diamond Head, and the coast by night.
You will enjoy a welcome drink and on-board entertainment as you cruise around the coast. Friday nights offer an extra hour with a firework display.

81.See the Kilauea Volcano

This is the most active volcano in the world, and you can watch it from a distance. You will find it on the island of Hawaii.
This volcano is called a shield volcano which means that the slopes are very shallow. The name ‘Kilauea’ means ‘much spreading’ and you will see that the lave constantly stretches out. Under the pressure of its own weight, fissures form and it is these that produce fiery curtains of magma which shoot up.
The best way to see this is to join a tour where you will be transported as close to the volcano as is safe. Normally just before dawn is the best time.
You can learn more about this amazing volcano and its history of eruptions.
If you want to stay a few days, there is accommodation at the Volcano House near the rim, although you must book in advance to stay here.

82. Visit the Island of Lanai

While there are just over 3,000 people who live on the island, the reason for visiting is to see the cats. The island is home to over 500 furry felines who live in their own section of the island.
The cat island was created in 2009 to rescue cats that were being killed because they begged for food. A volunteer program was set up to catch, neuter and release the cats.
All the cats are available for adoption, and maintaining, feeding and taking care of the cats comes from donations.

83. Hike Haleakala

This is a great hike, and not to be missed if hiking is what you do. The trail will take you right down into the massive bowl in Haleakala national Park, into the dormant volcano.
On a sunny day the colours sparkle in the light and are unlike anywhere else.
Do not be deceived into thinking that this is a barren area. It is full of live, in fact, some of the rarest plants, insects, and birds live here.

84. Visit Kilohana Plantation

This sugar cane plantation was once the home of a sugar baron. Today it is a museum where you can visit the charming house dating back to 1936.
There are guided tours which will tell you all about the sugar cane industry on the islands. Included in these tours are rainforest hikes and a rum tasting at the on-site distillery.
There is also a very delightful restaurant and several shops on the plantation, making this a great day out.

85. See the sunrise at Haleakala

This volcano rises 10,023 feet above the coastal area and is very popular for visitors to watch the sunrise.
You will be able to join the line of visitors who make their way to the mountaintop in the early morning darkness, to catch a glimpse of the sun coming up.
Be aware that only a certain number of visitors are permitted each day, so you must book in advance to see the sunrise. Take warm clothing as it can get cold before sunup.

86. Go Polynesian

This Cultural Centre is the number one tourist attraction. It celebrates the diverse backgrounds of all the people, with award-winning performances and attractions.
You will find this in Hawaii, and you should plan on spending a full day here watching Hawaiian games, spear throwing cooking and dances.
You may want to visit the theatre where you will learn about the Hawaiian Journey and the volcanoes in the area.
You may be lucky to see a typical Hawaiian wedding as well as the pageant of the Long Canoes, which only takes place at 2.30pm.

87. Haleakala National Park

This scenic park in upcountry Maui is also known as the ‘House of the Sun’. While you may start the day watching the sunrise, there are many other things to see in the park, such as the stunning terrains which may remind you of the planet Mars.
Look out for the most beautiful rock gardens and lush waterfalls. Streams abound as do beautiful pools where you can take a picnic lunch.
Sunrise and sunset are spectacular here, so try to get there for one of these times.
If you want to stay, there are cabins available, as well as a campsite.

88. Go upcountry Maui

This is not a specific place, rather an area that is well worth visiting. There are many working farms for you to visit, as well as vineyards making local wine and spirits.
Don’t be surprised if you come across Hawaiian Cowboys as this is where they originated. The culture started in the 19th century to teach islanders how to wrangle cattle.
This is a perfect way to drive an RV and explore the area. Take a few days to get to know the higher elevations of the county.

89. Hawaii Tropical Botanical Garden

You will find these gardens in Papaikou, on the island of Hawaii. The garden serves as a sanctuary for endangered plants. Look for the living seed bank to see the progress being made with rare plants.
The garden works to preserve as many plants as they can for the benefit of future generations.
The garden is also beautiful to walk around and is well worth a morning of your time.

90. See the dolphins

You will be able to see these creatures up close at the Hilton Waikoloa Village, where they have interactive programmes for all ages.
The centre was first opened in 1988 and is still one of its kind for natural habitats of dolphins.
It is important that you book your ticket well in advance as this is very popular with tourists and locals alike.

91. Thomas A. Jagger Museum

You will find this in the town of Volcano, on the island of Hawaii. It is right on the rim of the Kilauea Caldera in the Volcanoes National Park.
The museum has excellent exhibits and does a very good job of explain all about the geology of the area.
If possible, stay until dark where you will be able to see the glow of the lava coming from the Halema’uma’u Crater in the Caldera.

92. Visit the Hawaiian Vanilla Company

You will find this in the town of Paauilo, on the Island of Hawaii. Best to take the guided tour and learn all you ever wanted to know about vanilla. Then stay for lunch in the amazing restaurant.
You can book the tour and the lunch together, and it is well worth doing this. You will be treated to a dish of vanilla flamed shrimp, which is not to be missed!
Allow yourself most of the day, there is also a well-stocked gift shop to visit.

93. See the Seahorse Farm

This is a ‘must see’ for adults and children. You will find it in Kailua-Kona, on the island of Hawaii.
It is an interesting and educational place to see, with a well-informed tour guide. You will find out more about these interesting creatures than you ever thought possible!
If you are visiting in a large group, it is essential to book in advance, although small groups may be ok.

94. Experience Umauma

You will find this zipline in Hakalau on the Island of Hawaii. This is the only viewing area of the triple-Tier Water Falls.
There is a 9-line zipline, as well as a tropical garden, riverwalk and kayak area.
You will pass over no less than a dozen waterfalls as you zip along, as well as see the ocean, mountains, and beautiful river views.

95. See the Painted Church

This is found in the town of Captain Cook on the Island of Hawaii. It is one of the most popular historic sites to be visited.
This will not take you much longer than a half day, but the paintings inside make it well worth stopping.
Make sure you go inside to see the paintings on the walls.
The church relies totally on donations to keep it open.

96. Kanaloa Octopus Farm

You will find this in Kailua-Kona, on the Island of Hawaii. There are guided tours which will inform you all about the octopuses and their preservation. Children can interact with the creatures, although be prepared to be squirted!
You will learn all about the breeding programme to keep the species alive and be able to have a look around the gift shop.

97. Kahaluu Bay

This is at Kailua-Kona and is a great spot for snorkelling. There are some facilities on the beach such as a restroom and showers. If you head for the north side, you will find it more secluded for novices, and you will also find a lifeguard on duty.

This is a great place for new snorkelers as the entry is gentle and the water calm. You will be amazed at how many colourful fish you see just below the waves. It is also possible that you see turtles so keep an eye out for them.

98. Try Big Island candy

This is a speciality candy shop in Hilo, on the island of Hawaii. You will be able to watch candy being made and sample some pieces. Not only does the shop produce the most exquisite chocolate, but also many different varieties of candy.

Anything you buy will be beautifully gift-wrapped for you to take away as gifts – if you can resist eating them yourself!

99. Queen’s Market Place

You will find this market in Waikoloa, on the Island of Hawaii. You will be able to find all manner of art and fashion here as there are many small shops and stalls selling most things.
This is an interesting place to spend the day, there are plenty of restaurants and cafes where you can get lunch or snacks.

100. Skydive Hawaii

This is something that really should be on your list of things to do! You will find this on the Island of Hawaii, it is the largest skydiving centre on the island.

You will exit the plane at 12,000 for a tandem jump with an instructor who will point out things as you gently glide through the air before coming to land.

You will agree that this area is perfect for jumping out of a plane.

You must book this in advance, and you should definitely have a video made of your jump!

Conclusion
Hawaii is such a versatile country, with different things for the tourist to see and do every day. Whatever makes your holiday perfect, you will be able to find it here in this amazing place!


Jordan Maxwell Weighs In On President Donald Trump

TruthSeekah

Published on Aug 18, 2017

SUBSCRIBE 8.6K

Jordan Maxwell was recently asked about his opinions on President Donald Trump. Heres what he had to say. Instant Mp3 Download Here: https://goo.gl/G57uTZ Download This Episode On iTunes - https://goo.gl/1q5Uft Download On Android - https://goo.gl/kgRVzm Listen To The Full Episode Here http://www.TruthSeekah.com/Jordan-Max... Download This Episode On iTunes - https://goo.gl/1q5Uft Download On Android - https://goo.gl/kgRVzm OFFICAL http://www.TruthSeekah.com SUPPORT http://www.Patreon.com/TruthSeekah Get Your FREE Audio Book! http://www.Audibletrial.com/TruthSeekah Jordan Maxwell,jordan maxwell 2017,jordan maxwell birth certificate,jordan maxwell show,jordan maxwell religion,conspiracy theories 2017,conspiracy theory,jordan maxwell truth,jordan maxwell truthseekah,jordan maxwell breaks silence tells truth about trump and rigged elections,jordan maxwell the truth about the elite,the hidden truth feat jordan maxwell,conspiracy documentary,christianity documentary,jordan maxwell is it too much to ask for -~-~~-~~~-~~-~- For fans of the work of David Icke, Jordan Maxwell, Manly P Hall, David Wilcock, Michael Tsarion, Santos Bonacci, James Gilliland & ECETI Ranch, Dr.Steven Greer, Coast To Coast AM, Alex Jones, Project Camelot, Project Avalon, Red Ice Creations, Graham Hancock, George Noorey, Art Bell, Steve Quayle, Tom Horn, Whitley Strieber, Rupert Sheldrake, Michael S Heiser, Erich von Däniken, Zecharia Sitchin and everyone else dedicated to the furtherance of revealing the TRUTH. tags: Esoteric, Third Eye, Astral Projection, Meditation, Dreams, Chakras, OBE, NDE, UFOs, Angels, Demons, Reincarnation, Karma, Dreams, Purgatory, Angels, Demons, Initiation, Ascension, Alien sightings, ExoTheology, UFO Religions, Abductions, Close Encounters, Extraterrestrial, Extraterrestrials, Occult, Aleister Crowley, Wicca, Witchcraft, Divination, Healing, Magic, Rituals, Enlightenment, Real Truth, Subliminal Messaging, Illuminati, 2012, Maya, Atlantis, Lemuria, Annunaki, Sumerian, Hidden history, Secrets, Holographic Reality, Vibration, 4D, 4th Dimension, 2012, Amon Ra, Ancient Aliens, ancient History, Annunaki, Atlantis, Awakening, Awaken Your Inner Self, Beginning, Bible, Conspiracy, Deception, Demons, DNA, Doomsday, Earth, Ego, Emerald Tablets, Thoth, Hermes, End of Days, Energy, Enlightenment, Exposed, Fibonacci Sequence, Freemaso, Holographic Reality Hopi Illuminati, Illusion, Interdimensional Beings, Jesus, Legend, Lemuria, Light, Magic, Maya, Meditation, Mind Control, Multidimensional, Nephilim, Nibiru, NWO, Planet X, Raising Eden, Sacred Geometry, Satanic, Science, Secret Info, Secrets Self Awareness, Shift, Atlantean, Transcendence, Truth, UFO Sightings, Universe,


The Hidden Hand of the Rothschild () Banking Family


Robert Sepehr

Published on Sep 14, 2016

The Rothschild family is a wealthy family descending from Mayer Amschel Rothschild, a court Jew to the German Landgraves of Hesse-Kassel, in the Free City of Frankfurt, who established his banking business in the 1760s. The Balfour Declaration was a letter dated 2 November 1917 from the United Kingdom's Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild, a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmission to the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland. It read: "His Majesty's government view with favors the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country." The text of the letter was published in the press one week later, on 9 November 1917. The "Balfour Declaration" was later incorporated into both the Sèvres peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire, and the Mandate for Palestine. The original document is kept at the British Library. Thank you for the support! https://www.patreon.com/user?u=5703352

Noam Chomsky - The Crimes of U.S. Presidents

Chomsky's Philosophy

Published on Oct 7, 2014

Chomsky goes through some of the crimes of the post-war presidents. From 2003.


 

Noam Chomsky on RussiaGate

PRIMO NUTMEG

Published on Jul 28, 2018

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In this clip from PRIMO NUTMEG #144, iconic linguist and political commentator Noam Chomsky gives insight on claims of alleged Russian interference in the 2016 US presidential election, US-Russian relations, the prospect of a new Cold War, the Democratic Party, campaign finance, and NATO's eastward expansion. Get access to the early episodes of PRIMO NUTMEG for only $1 a month on Patreon: https://patreon.com/primonutmeg Subscribe to PRIMO NUTMEG on YouTube, SoundCloud, and iTunes! https://www.primonutmeg.com/ https://youtube.com/c/primonutmeg/ https://soundcloud.com/primonutmeg https://facebook.com/primonutmeg/ https://twitter.com/primonutmeg/ https://instagram.com/primonutmeg/


The Collapse of the American Empire?

The Agenda with Steve Paikin

Published on Sep 12, 2018


The Agenda welcomes Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges, who over the past decade and a half has made his name as a columnist, activist and author. He's been a vociferous public critic of presidents on both sides of the American political spectrum, and his latest book, 'America, the Farewell Tour,' is nothing short of a full-throated throttling of the political, social, and cultural state of his country.


If This Doesn't Make You a Believer, I Doubt Anything Will

Amplex

Published on Jun 2, 2018

Join the Amplex Team - https://www.patreon.com/Amplex 

Find us on Social Media: Facebook - http://bit.ly/2ekB29N


Time Traveller Who Went to The Year 2749 Reveals All...

Amplex

Published on Dec 5, 2017

"Special shout-out to channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/cesocom for some of the visuals used in the video" ➨Check Out our Online Store: https://amplex-live.myshopify.com/ Loads of Unique Gadgets & Tech up for Grabs! ➨Join the Amplex Team - https://www.patreon.com/Amplex Find us on Social Media: ➨Facebook - http://bit.ly/2ekB29N The Visuals used in this Video are from the following Channels: Dianhui Studio CREATRIX VISUALS State Zero


World Changing Device Locked Away by Illuminati

 

 

Amplex

Published on Apr 14, 2018

SUBSCRIBE 334K

➨Check Out our Online Store: https://amplex-live.myshopify.com/ Loads of Unique Gadgets & Tech up for Grabs! ➨Join the Amplex Team - https://www.patreon.com/Amplex Find us on Social Media: ➨Facebook - http://bit.ly/2ekB29N


MIRROR] COINCIDENCE proves we live in a Simulated Reality!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8KFMFON4Np4

Brian MacFarlane

Published on Jan 14, 2018

LINK to the Original video by Parallel Portal: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQHHv... ***PLEASE READ ALL THE DESCRIPTION*** (UPDATED 12/6/2017) (See LINKS below) Hey guys be sure to hit that like and subscribe for more videos to come as we delve into this phenomenon called the Mandela Effect. Also be sure to check out my other videos and hashtag #MandelaEffectResidue on for more residues. The Gathering's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzyE... Dr. Tarrin P Lupo's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/LCLREPORT Moneybags73's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/MoneyBags73 One Harmony's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCM8l... 56kaybrown's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/56kaybrown Reality Shifter's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/echaug14 Lone Eagle's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSEG... I am Lazlow's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOAU... Cynthia Sue Larson's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/CynthiaS... The Marlena Effect's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/AmazingM... Changing Matrix's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZG0... Scarabperformance's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/scarabpe... LIFE MATRIX's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCkHx... DigitalScribe's channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCd9R... Rena Jacile's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/Nyeusigr... EMAN31's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/MsEman31 Meegs B's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFRR... Evin Powers's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/EvinTV Jynx Cat's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/Annsimonem Guy Fauqes's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxFO... God's Armor's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/sportste... Michelle Platti's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/momentso... William Thorg's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/thorgw Gemini Vision's Channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/GEMINIVI... Link to the SHARE DRIVE: https://goo.gl/6lOnVp Link to handwritten KJV: https://goo.gl/tJcuNZ Link to KJV Meat and Potatoes: https://goo.gl/SG6SJM Mandela Effect Quiz: http://thechive.com/2017/01/09/can-yo... Mandela Effect T-shirt (to order): cash.me/$mandelaeffect (Be sure to include your shirt size and location where you want me to ship to) Serenity Rayne's Recovery: https://www.gofundme.com/serenity-ray... Please be sure to send tracings and residues to: MandelaEffectAwareness@gmail.com Subject: Residue


Why NASA never went back to the moon...

Why NASA never went back to the moon...

John Caleb Warren

Published on May 22, 2018

This is a clip from a documentary that I found very interesting pertaining to the moon landing. Lucid Truth - strange truth project  https://youtu.be/6LFifYYdkhA


Hidden from History:
The Canadian Holocaust

CONTROL OF WATER = CONTROL OF PEOPLE

http://canadiangenocide.nativeweb.org/water_control.html

This is the plan to control the water.....and you.

THE GRAND CANAL PROJECT - GLEN KEALEY INTERVIEW

The Quebec Referendum
The Grand Canal Project
US-Canadian Continental Union by 2005

http://canadiangenocide.nativeweb.org/index.html

Also look at:

The Untold Story of the Genocide of Aboriginal Peoples by Church and State in Canada

by (Rev.) Kevin Annett

Recent Additions:

  • A Chronology of Attacks made against Reverend Kevin D. Annett (1993-2005) - January 22, 2005
  • Vigil for Justice outside a "church" with blood on its hands - September 12 - September 6, 2004
  • A Call for Help from many people, and from the Truth Commission into Genocide in Canada - June 25, 2004
  • Control of Water = Control of PeopleThis is the plan to control the water.....and you - June 25, 2004
  • Olympic Boycott - Demand Justice for Indigenous Peoples in Canada! (please reprint and circulate) - June 22, 2004
  • Duplessis orphans call for exhumations: Aim to show children were experimented upon - June 19, 2004
  • Canada and its Churches are Accused of Genocide by Major Guatemalan Indigenous Organizations - May 31, 2004
  • Let Justice Begin in your own Back Yard, and Church Yard: An Open Letter to the United Church of Canada - March 23, 2004

To see all additions, and archives, please visit What's New

The series of postings that you are about to see tell a story so amazing, so full of callous corruption and greed, so destructive to the Quebec and Cree peoples and to the Canadian nation, and so *well-concealed* by those in the Canadian media who are *fully aware* of these details, that you deserve a full and clear introduction to each of the main narrators:

GLEN KEALEY: is the former Hull, Quebec, commercial developer who exposed the system of organized crime and corruption run by ex-Prime Minister Mulroney's government and the complicity of the RCMP and the justice system.

In 1986 Kealey was asked for a bribe by Public Works Minister Roch LaSalle, who offered him government support for his project in exchange for 5% of all government contributions on top of $5,000 up front. Investigating, Kealey found evidence of a massive bribe and kickback scheme operated and controlled right out of the Prime Minister's Office, and a close collaboration between the Tories, the media and the police. Kealey successfully charged 16 people, including members of the government and RCMP, with criminal conspiracy. He is co-chair of THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE FOR POLITICAL INTEGRITY in Ottawa [819 -778 1705; fax 613-747 1644]

SHELLEY ANN CLARK: the executive assistant to Germain Denis, Brian Mulroney's personal appointee to the Free Trade Agreement negotiations, during which plans were made to dismember and demolish Canada, first by Quebec's separation, and then by Continental Union in 2005.

GEORGE KRALIK: An eleven-year veteran of the Canadian Armed Forces.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------

THE FOLLOWING ASTOUNDING INTERVIEW HAS BEEN EXTRACTED FROM "NEW WORLD ORDER: CORRUPTION IN CANADA", PUBLISHED IN DECEMBER, 1994, BUT NOW OUT OF PRINT

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Kralik: I would like to ask you about the water, our natural resources in water. What is it to be used for? How is it to be transported?

Kealey: Think of money. If you had your choice, if you could pull a genie out of a bottle and the genie could grant three wishes, what would your three wishes be? Remember your goal is to make the most money possible?

Kralik: I should really have to think a lot about that, but...

Kealey: I would say: 'Number one, give me control over the sun. Number two, give me control over the air. Number three give me control over water.' Now, leaving our little genie aside, we know we cannot control the sun, nor can we control the air. BUT WE CAN CONTROL WATER. On the scale of things that are required for human life, it is the most important element that can be controlled.

Kralik: What do you mean when you say 'control'?

Kealey: OK. In GATT, General Agreement on Trades and Tariffs, it says that free-flowing water is not a'good'. The key wording is 'free-flowing'. If you construct a dam it is no longer free-flowing and therefore it becomes private property, owned by somebody, capable of being sold to others, or mortgaged.

Kralik: If it is dammed?

Kealey: If it is dammed. Any time the free-flowing water has been obstructed. Of course in GATT, there is much talk about bottled water.

Kralik: It's a side trick?

Kealey: It's a side trick. The biggest scam ever to be pulled on the entire world is Free Trade and I'll tell you why.

There is a lady in Ottawa by the name of Shelley Ann Clark. She was the executive secretary to the third highest negotiator during the Free Trade deal. His name was Germain Denis. His two visible superiors were Gordon Ritchie and Simon Riesman. Before he became Free Trade negotiator, Simon Reisman had a difficult job. He was the director of a project called the Grand Canal, which is to be built from James Bay.

In 1985-86, my offices were in Hull in the commercial part in Place de Portage, the government complex which houses the Supply and Services Offices. [NOTE: Hull, Quebec is just across the river from Ottawa, Ontario, and is filled with federal offices and civil servants] One day I was visited by a man named Art Bailey. Bailey was a former Assistant Deputy Minister of Supply and Services and had been following the development of my project, the Micot Building. I had raised a hundred and sixty million bucks to build this high tech centre in Hull. We had bought the land and were just about ready to start construction when Art Bailey walked into my office. 'Mr. Kealey,'he said, 'You've done a fantastic job of marketing this Micot Building. Nobody would ever have believed that anyone could raise a hundred and sixty million dollars to build a building in Hull - this is totally out of sync with anything that anybody believed.' So he said, 'We think you're the best marketing man in Canada and that you should come and join our team and become the Marketing Manager for the Grand Canal.'

I said, 'What the hell's the Grand Canal? I don't know what you're talking about.' So he gave me a document -a twenty to twenty-five page document - which I read. This is what I read: James Bay is five hundred miles north to south, is a hundred and twenty miles across at the mouth, salt water on the average thirty-five to forty-five feet deep. If a dam were to be constructed at the mouth of James Bay and Hudson's Bay and a second one, one third down, and a third, a third down again - therefore three dams - it would allow over a period of ten years for water to flow from the fresh water rivers and would push the salt water back beyond the dams and create the largest fresh water reservoir known to man. So much so that a canal could be built leading out of the south-east corner of James Bay, south over the mountain ranges with dykes and locks and whatever you need to lift water for eight hundred miles, then at Rouen-Noranda in northern Quebec, nature's gravity would take over and the water would start going down the other side of the mountain range, in Ontario, the Ottawa River and the French River systems, past Kirkland lake and eventually it would end up in Georgian Bay [in Lake Superior]. The amount of water that would be brought back - fresh water from that Canal - could double the flow of water that now enters the Great lakes. Of course, if you can double the water entering the Great lakes you can take half of the total water out without changing anything in the Great Lake System.

The water would be removed in two places: at the base of Lake Michigan - they don't need it this year, this year they have enough water - they would open up the sluices and move water down to the Mississippi Delta, almost all the way to Mexico, in the Gulf of Mexico; the second outlet would be from Lake Superior, moving water across Manitoba, into Saskatchewan, then down into the United States to bring water to the Mid West and South West of the United States. We must understand, of course, that since we are living in a period of global warming, the bread basket of North America which is situated in one place now, moves further north as it gets warmer, making the bottom part arid. So water is absolutely critical to enlarge the bread basket of North America as the earth gets warmer.

There is another dimension: if Canadian waters, presently flowing into and towards the Arctic and the North of Canada, are diverted and artificially made to flow in a southerly direction (for instance diverted towards the United States for water use), then the Northern cold climate temperatures will move in a southerly direction and the Canadian terrain will become colder and more frigid; the balance of the Canadian climate will be reduced temperature, which will cause a massive environmental shift in Canada, all to Canada's detriment.

This theory can be supported by simple physics and hydrology. The waters flowing north are of a warmer temperature and have a warm front pushing against the Arctic North temperatures; if removed, the Arctic North will move South. It doesn't matter whether this occurs in summer or the winter seasons. If the rivers and waters are diverted to flow southerly then one will require more fuel to heat our homes and buildings; however, Canadians will only have what is available after the U.S. has its needs supplied under the NAFTA Agreement, etc.

The two transnationals who were pushing this plan were R. J. R. Nabisco (the biggest agribusiness in the United States), led by a Mr. Johnson out of Winnipeg -there's been a film made of him recently called "Barbarians at the Gate" and it shows how he tried to take over the company with junk bonds and whatever; and the other one was Archer Daniels Midland, which cans and boxes or packages all of the agri-business that comes in from R.J.R. Nabisco and distributes it throughout the world. It is interesting, of course, that Mr. Johnson was Mulroney's sponsor, bringing him on tours throughout the U.S. and that Archer Midland Daniels has just hired [ex-Prime Minister] Mulroney [who pushed both Free Trade and NAFTA through the Canadian Parliament] as a director.

I traveled across Western Canada and there have been public demonstrations recently in B.C., Alberta, and Saskatchewan over the building of dams and Kemano in B.C., Old Man River in Alberta and Alimeda in Rafferty dams in Saskatchewan. People ask why are they building dams where there is no water. Once you understand the relationship of the Grand Canal to the entire area you then know where the water will be coming from.

Kralik: Do you see any possible ecological disasters as a result this ?

Kealey: Of course. Some natives believe the sheer weight of the water behind the dams will cause the axis of the earth to shift and if you build a dam you change the chemistry of the earth. You cannot flood the areas that we are talking about without changing the configuration of the soil and landscape. But transnationals don't think in those terms: they think in terms of money. In 1985-86 it was stated t hat the project would cost two hundred billion dollars (U.S.). It was also stated that the money was available.

American Express wants to be the banker and do you think that it is by coincidence that American Express was allowed, by Order of Council, to become a Bank in Canada, with Brian Mulroney breaking fourteen banking regulations just to allow them to achieve this status?

As well, Alcan Aluminum needs dams for their mines and Barrick for their gold-owning concerns. Mulroney also signed Orders in Council breaking the law that made it illegal for foreigners to own more than fifty percent of a mine in Canada.Now foreigners can own mines outright in Canada: there are no restrictions.

None of these changes in the rules were made through Parliament but by a stroke of Brian Mulroney's pen. Most people in Canada Live with the illusion that laws are written by Parliament, but most regulations are changed by politicians in power. For every law that passes though Parliament, there are three thousand laws that are changed unilaterally behind the scenes.

In any case, Simon Riesman put forward a plan to have us put aside our 'old concepts' and to start thinking 'boldly about the future'. By that he meant nothing less than giving up Canada: we need to have a new political reality, he argued, and therefore Free Trade and water diversion go hand in hand. We also know, he surmised, that if the US asked us for either water or free trade, Canadians would rebel: so let us make it appear that Canada is doing the asking. Mulroney was bought with the Bankers' money and he did the asking, publicly stating the opposite of what he had always contended: that he didn't believe in Free Trade, etc.

Back Room Manipulations in the Free Trade Deal I know what was negotiated in the Free Trade deal and how the deal was done because my executive secretary [NOTE: now his wife] is Shelley Ann Clark, who worked as the executive secretary to Germain Denis, the third highest-ranking negotiator. This is how the deal was done - Simon Reisman and Gordon Ritchie went to Washington and gave away Canada and as they were giving away Canada they were at the time preparing a briefing book on a computer which appeared simultaneously on a computer in Ottawa. Mulroney and Denis worked together and Shelley Ann Clark was the secretary working between the two of them.

There was one hitch. Although the Federal Government did not legally need the permission of the Premiers, politically Free Trade would have been impossible to sell unless the Premiers were on side. So two Premiers were bought by Mulroney - the Premier of Alberta and the Premier of Saskatchewan. They became Mulroney's moles within the Premier's camp.

Their job was to go around and identify the acceptable bottom lines in terms of textiles, agriculture, mining, subsidies, unemployment insurance, health care - all of the things that affect our sovereignty. What would the Premiers be prepared to sacrifice? The two moles would then bring the info to Denis, whose job it was to brief the Premiers approximately eight times during the negotiations.

How was this done? Since there were a bunch of Premiers who would have disagreed fundamentally if they knew what was really happening, and you knew what their bottom lines were, Premiers' briefings were always given at 50 O'Connor on the seventeenth floor. At midnight the night before a briefing, Shelley Ann Clark would be told to come into Denis' office - only he and she would be in the office - and call up the briefing books on the computer. She would then be ordered to re-name a copy of the entire briefing book negotiated that day to The Provincial Briefing Book. Denis would then take the notes he had got from the Premiers about the bottom lines and go through the main document paragraph by paragraph.

Here are some examples. He would come to the section on 'Water'- build a Grand Canal, build dams, move water to the U.S. - and he would say,'Delete that paragraph and insert a line that says 'free-flowing water is not included in this deal." Textiles? 'If it said we have given up sixty percent, change it to twelve.' Ms.Clark would change it to twelve.

Agriculture? 'Cut back on the production of turkeys forty percent. Write in eight.'

And they would go through the entire book like that. At the end - at about three o'clock in the morning -they would produce ten copies. Every page of each new copy was numbered so that if a page went missing or was copied in any way, they would know which Premier would have done it.

Not that they were given a chance to do this! The Premiers would arrive for the briefing session, always complaining about not having been given the books ahead of time. 'It is too sensitive,' they were told, 'here's the Briefing Book.' At the end of the session Denis would pick up the Briefing Books, and Shelley Anne Clark would shred nine of the books and keep one, so that Denis would remember what lies he had told when he would have to change the books next time.

Kralik: The reason why he changed the percentages of the cutbacks in productions was to make it look favourable?

Kealey: And acceptable, politically, to the Premiers. That they were not giving away what they *were* giving away. And once it is given away, how can you ever get it back?

Kralik: What they were negotiating, with relation to textiles, turkeys, or whatever was a kind of smoke-screen cover for the big Grand Canal ?

Kealey: Everything in there was doctored. There were two key issues that we didn't hear anything about: the integration of Canada into the United States, and the movement of water through the Grand Canal. Those are the two key issues. How do you do that without anybody knowing? On 3 October 1987 the Free Trade Agreement was signed in Washington. A thirty-three page summary was delivered to Parliament. *The original text has never been seen by the public.* A year later a legal document of some fifteen hundred pages detailing the ramifications of certain items was made public and is used by lawyers today. *But what is not known, what has not been seen is the original Free Trade Deal which is at least two hundred and some odd pages long.* Because Shelley Ann Clark knows what she knows, and because of the contacts that she now has, she is a threat to the government [i.e. the previous, Mulroney, government] Last December (1992) they sent her home on full pay.

Kralik: Laid off.

Kealey: No, not laid off. She has her full pay. She was told, 'Go home. We don't want you talking to people.' What they didn't know then, was that home for her meant, in July 1993, becoming my executive secretary.

Kralik: What a bonus! That is great!

Kealey: They haven't touched her in any way because they were afraid. She still has her top security clearance, but when she went to the archives and asked to see the Free Trade Documents, she was given an index which she skimmed through and questioned: 'There's no Premier's Briefing Books here?' The guy answered: 'Well it's possible. We didn't get everything. We don't know. We just get what we get.' So she said, 'May I see the Free Trade Deal ? "Oh, no,'he resumed,' under the Statute that governs access to information, ninety-five percent of the Free Trade Deal has been declared a security problem for Canada and is not being made available to the public. Even with your top security clearance, you could not get it unless you had the 0.K. from the Deputy Minister of External Affairs.' So she said, 'You know who I am and that's not possible: he would never give it to me.' She was told, 'In any event the Free Trade Deal is in canisters 16 miles outside of Ottawa and is not to be seen by Canadians for thirty years. "This doesn't make any sense in a democratic country,' she said,'Why can the people not see it? I know what is in it and it's a danger to our national security all right. It gives the country away and thirty years from now it is going to be too late. The implementation schedule ends at 2005. The Grand Canal must be in place and Quebec must be separate.

The Integration of Canada and the United States Kealey: Plot for a movie: The date is the early 1960's. Dag Hammerskjold, the Secretary General of the UN, is flying between countries on the Lower African continent. He has been trouble-shooting border disputes which are being caused by the competition for access to mineral deposits.

Suddenly two fighter planes pull up alongside the UN plane and, without warning, shoot it down with missiles. The next day the world media report it as an 'accident'.

Fade to secret rendez-vous: Two mercenaries (the pilots of the fighter planes) are paid by under-cover agent employed by the TRANSNATIONAL MINING CABAL (funded by Rothschild-Rockefeller).

Fade to the New York (or Philadelphia) boardroom of Hanna Mining. It is now the late 1970's.

The same under-cover agent, an employee of Hanna Mining, quietly admits his role in the assassination to the Board of Directors. The admission bothers no one. Attention then turns to another internal problem. A Canadian branch operation company President, Brian Mulroney, of The Iron Ore Company of Canada, is being asked to shut down the Schefferville mine in Quebec. This is a very profitable mine, but one which competes successfully against the less profitable U.S. mines the Cabal also own. Mulroney is not-so-subtly reminded (blackmailed) by other directors, who threaten to expose the way he once looted the company pension fund in order to start the construction of his grand pet project, the Lord's Inn, which is to be built in Labrador (the hotel is an exact replica of Montreal's Ritz Carleton Hotel). Mulroney wisely agrees.

Fades to Schefferville. Families are being torn apart by the closing of the mine. Mulroney pays off the trouble-makers and the local media to keep things quiet. He badly wants to become a national politician and doesn't need bad publicity.

Fade to Paris, France. It is now October 1980: George Bush, Edward Meese, Earl Casey and a Dr. Brian are observed surreptitiously negotiating with Iranians. They want them to hold onto the American hostages until after the US elections and the inauguration on 20 January 1981. They promise arms for the hostages if Ronald Reagan is elected. They also agree to sell the Iranians more arms later, to raise money for the Nicaraguan Contras.

Fade to Washington. It is 20 January 1981: Reagan and Bush are being inaugurated. The hostages are being released simultaneously.

Fade to Oval office. It is 21 January 1981: Trans-national corporate leaders and bankers tell Reagan, 'The US is broke. If it were corporation it would be shut down. The answer lies in a political merger with Canada. But first the two countries must be 'HARMONIZED'. The plan evolves on the spot (between 1985 and 2005):

Back Mulroney with cash and spin-doctors. Send money through the Mormon Bishop of Virginia, up to Winnipeg, and then to Montreal.

Once elected, link Mulroney with Simon Reisman, the former Deputy Minister of Finance. Reisman is presently the Director of the Grand Canal fresh water diversion scheme.

Appoint Reisman to lead a negotiating team which arrives from Canada begging for a Free Trade Deal. Let them pretend to be negotiating while they actually just follow a given pre-set IMPLEMENTATION SCHEME designed to harmonize Canada's laws to the USA.

Write into the Free Trade deal the secret arrangements made to change Canada's foreign ownership laws by ORDERS IN COUNCIL, at once.

Replace the Canadian Government with the Bankers' second division team, the Liberals (TORY II). This will help allay most peoples' fears and continue the illusion of existing democracy and independence.

Manage the separation of Quebec by placing the trans-national bankers' man, Lucien Bouchard, at the head of the separatist movement.

Get the Canadian Government to back native claims against Quebec and publicly support the native's right to self-determination.

Keep scaring Canadians with talk of the deficit. Raise taxes, reduce services. Increase drug patent protection. Cut employment to a minimum. People will then accept any conditions for employment proposed later, by the wealthy trans-national job creators. Build more dams.

Borrow 100 billion dollars for the construction of water diversion projects across the north. When the project is at its mid-point, try to borrow a further 100 billion dollars. This second loan will be denied.

When the International Monetary Fund declares that Canada is clearly insolvent, a general panic sets in. The Prime Minister runs down to Washington to plead for more credit. He is told loans are available on the condition Canada merges with the USA. This new deal would create a new country - the United States of NORTH America.

The PM returns to Canada and informs Canadians about the American offer. He states, 'there is no other choice'and civil war breaks out in Quebec. Natives of Ungava (northern Quebec) declare unilateral independence. The QPF attack native reserves from helicopters. The PM calls upon the UN for military assistance - on the pretext of defending the CREE [from the attacking Quebec forces].

Military from Fort Drum, New York, all wearing the UN Blue Berets, cross the border at Kingston. Within two hours they surround Parliament in Ottawa. Others move north by air and take charge of the power Plant at James Bay.

Later, Quebec is partitioned by the UN and the World Bank takes control of the water projects. Quebec is placed under a UN-sponsored economic blockade until they finally agree to use English as the working language. Quebec becomes the 55th State of the USNA etc., etc., etc.

Kealey: Let us take all of this a little more slowly: a plane is flying over Africa with the Secretary General of the United Nations sitting in it when all of a sudden two fighter planes show up alongside and shoot it down. Movie switches back over to a boardroom with the heads of TRANSNATIONAL corporations in mining, agri-business and finance in the US planning for the election of their man to lead the United States for four terms, George Bush. The strategy is devised: put a Charlie McCarthy-type dummy in for the first eight years, Ronald Reagan, with George Bush's hand in the back of the jacket which wags and makes him talk.

Kralik: So it's your opinion that Reagan was a good front man for George Bush?

Kealey: Bush was the man fronting for the transnational corporations, former head of the CIA, involved in drug peddling and raising money for them in that way.

Upon taking over the reins of the country, George Bush and Ronald Reagan call in the presidents of the key transnational companies with their accountants and say: 'Tell us the real picture.' The accountants tell them that if the United States were a corporation it would have to be shut down immediately. It is bankrupt. 'We have wasted our resources. We have ruined our cities. Our assets and debts don't balance.'

The critical question is then put: what is the solution? 'There is only one solution. We must merge Canada politically with the US if we are to re-balance the books. Canada is virgin country with a multitude of natural resources, water, mines, oil, gas, etc. Add Canada to the U.S. and you'll have re-balanced the picture for a long time to come. "How do we do that? We can't merge Canada and the US politically. Canada has a province that speaks French. "Get them to separate! "How do we do that?'

Then the president of Hanna Mining, who has been sitting the table, stands up and says, 'I have a division called the Iron Ore Company of Canada and I have a man there by the name of Brian Mulroney. He just shut down the town of Schefferville, Quebec for me, and he did an excellent job. Shutting down Canada wouldn't be much of a problem for him. Let's bring him in'. 'Exactly, but, can he be trusted?'

'Well our man Reisman has been Deputy Minister of Finance in Canada for a while. He is in charge of this Grand Canal project.We need the water and we can get them to work together as a team. "But how do we get the money to them? "The Mormon Church in Virginia is tied into the Republican party, so we can move the money across to Utah, then up into Winnipeg (Jake Epp and his group), keep it all secret and fund Mulroney's campaign for the leadership of the Conservative party - then we're in business. 'Don't forget there's just been a Referendum in Quebec and they voted to stay with Canada. So there is a job to be done and it can't be done in a short period of time.'

They decide that it is going to take fourteen or fifteen years to put the whole project together; in the interval, the economies, social programs, and laws of the two countries would be quietly harmonized as much as possible. 'But you know Canadians are pretty up tight about things like that, so you can't tell them, you've got to keep things fairly quiet. "Don't worry about it. We own the leaders of the Liberal party and the leaders of the Tory party. They are all on our team: it is just that ordinary bureaucrats don't know what game they are playing.'

We have here a project that begins in 1981, is formalized through 1981 and 1982. In 1983 Mulroney wins a seat in Nova Scotia. In 1984 there is one Tory in Quebec, his name is Roch La Salle and he sees this hoard of people and money pouring in in support of this Brian Mulroney. If Mulroney gets elected in Quebec, Roch La Salle's power will evaporate, so he fights tooth and nail with Joe Clark to try to keep Mulroney out.

On election day Mulroney wins. He is now the leader of the Conservative Party and he becomes the leader of the government of Canada on 4 September 1984. The next thing that happens is that within eleven days of the election four break-ins occur: at PC headquarters in Montreal, PC party headquarters, PC Canada Fund, and at the office of David Angus (Mulroney's communications director) and Rodrigue Pageau (Mulroney's chief of Staff).

The four break-ins are noticed on the following Monday morning. Montreal police are called in. The break-ins are unusual in the sense that only information has been taken: the safe that contained the documents as to the source of Mulroney's funds, computer discs, a photocopier on which they had attempted first to copy documents but obviously ran out of time, and a computer.

Yet there was cash, calculators, and typewriters that were not touched at all. The safe was heavy enough that it required at least three people to lift and take out.

The Montreal Police were conducting their investigation when along came a member of the RCMP, Denis LaPointe, who stated: 'I've been sent from Ottawa to find out how the investigations are coming along. Can I help?' Without his knowledge, a reporter overheard the conversation, Richard Cleroux of The Globe and Mail, and a story is printed in the Globe that night.

The next morning the phone rings at The Globe and Mail. Denis LaPointe is mad as hell: 'What business is it of yours to write that?' Of course, in fact, LaPointe had no authority to be there: he hadn't been assigned to go there, but was acting undercover for Brian Mulroney or Roch LaSalle and other politicians, without Commissioner Simmonds knowing this was even taking place.

When you probe into Denis LaPointe's background you will find that he was raised in Joliette, Quebec. His best buddies were Roch LaSalle and Frank Majeau and he and Roch were involved in businesses; Majeau was LaSalle's executive assistant but Majeau's main business was 'prestige entertainment'. 'Prestige Entertainment' delivered strippers to all the clubs in Eastern Ontario and Western Quebec and moved drugs out of Mirabel airport and the port of Montreal through these strippers. This was actively assisted by a limousine service owned by two Iranians. These people were all linked.

Within a matter of days, the Montreal Police were told to forget the investigation: 'It's not important. Nothing they took was of any value.' But when Frank Majeau came to testify at the hearing in 1991, he revealed what subsequently had transpired. It was that Roch LaSalle was invited to Quebec City by Mulroney's accountant, Michel Cote, who had just been elected and who had become the Minister of Consumer and Corporate Affairs responsible for the Post Office as well. And Michel Cote did something very strange for Roch LaSalle, the sworn enemy of Brian Mulroney: he paid off his entire debt load - four hundred thousand dollars, mostly gambling debts to Frank Catroni. He was THE BOSS: they are the Mob - the Mafia.

The second curious thing that happened was that Brian Mulroney appointed Roch LaSalle Minister of Public Works; when you understand the potential for corruption at Public Works you realize that you don't put Colonel Sanders in charge of the chicken coop and expect the chickens to be there when you come to collect.

The third thing that happened was that Andre Bissonette, who had won the election in St. Jean, was made Minister for Small Business, responsible for the Federal Business Development Bank and although the Federal Business Development Bank will normally loan seventy-five thousand dollars to companies to save them from going under and laying off people (a large loan is a hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars, but the average is about seventy-five). Lo and behold, in this case The Federal Business Development Bank made loans to thirty-nine strip clubs in Eastern Ontario and Western Quebec, loans of five hundred thousand dollars, nine hundred thousand dollars - a total of seventeen million dollars.

The preponderance of circumstantial evidence therefore suggests that Roch laSalle, Lapointe (a member of the RCMP) and Frank Majeau (a member of the mob), stole the safe, got the goods on Mulroney, blackmailed him and got him to appoint LaSalle to his important position: Minister of Public Works.

Of course [RCMP] Commissioner Simmonds, not knowing about this internal arrangement proceeded to investigate almost all of them during Mulroney's first mandate as they were being caught all over the place with their hands in the till. Simmonds, you wilI remember, was called to a meeting with Trudeau when Trudeau was looking for a new Commissioner of the RCMP. Simmonds was asked the question, 'If you were made Commissioner of the RCMP and you discovered tomorrow that I was a crook, what would you do?' His answer was, 'I would arrest you personally, Sir,' and Trudeau to his credit appointed him Commissioner of the RCMP.

Facilitating the Separation of Quebec Simmonds was not the type of RCMP Commissioner that Mulroney needed. For Mulroney was empowered to destroy the country and to destroy the country he had to build a fund that could finance the separation of Quebec. As we know, he brought in his friend Lucien Bouchard to lead the project: by adding five percent to the contracts and getting his team in position within the RCMP so that they could peddle drugs, the fund grew to such an extent that when he left power there was sufficient money to continue playing the game from behind the scenes.

What we have today is Mulroney's plan: one truly National Party, the Liberals, with the most hated politician in Quebec as its head, Jean Chretien. Next you have Lucien Bouchard leading the Official Opposition with the biggest block of Separatists ever, and last you have Preston Manning, leading a Reform Party - one gang that says, 'We're leaving,' and the other one that says, 'Go to hell.'

Kralik: To facilitate the split?

Kealey: To facilitate the split because this is what is required. You cannot integrate Canada and the United States as long as Quebec is there. Step number one is the separation of Quebec by 1995. Step number two is, sadly, to merge the rest of Canada with the United States. Shelley Ann Clark says the material she saw in the Trade Negotiations Office cited Canada as a fifty-first state. Other CIA agents I know have stated fifty-first, fifty-second, fifty-third, and fifty-fourth states: the maritimes, Ontario, the prairies, British Columbia with the northern territories - four states. The third step is a revolution by the Cree of Northern Quebec against a separate Quebec - saying we're not going!

Kralik: A smoke screen?

Kealey: While the natives don't know the game, their leaders must certainly know where they are going. More likely than not they would have been bought off. The natives themselves have no way of fighting back. Quebec cabinet ministers want to buy helicopters because that is the only effective military vehicle for that kind of war, to put the natives in their place. In all likelihood the United Nations would be called in under the pretext of 'protecting'the indigenous peoples of Northern Quebec from the 'oppressive' Quebecois who want them to be a part of an independent Quebec. Blue berets will be placed on the heads of whom? Most likely, the soldiers located at Fort Drum, across the bridge from Kingston [Ontario]. Fort Drum is the largest military establishment in the US, with a ground surface larger than Metro Toronto, supposedly there for desert and jungle warfare training but really to control the subversive elements in Canada, and specifically the Cree in the north.

First, they overwhelm the Cree in the far north. Then they get their hands on James Bay. Quebec is shrunken down to its 1867 boundaries - five hundred miles long, a hundred miles north to south along the St. Lawrence River.

Now they have a hand on the hydro switch: they build the Grand Canal with the water moving not through Quebec but around Quebec: Quebec becomes an island surrounded by the United States of North America. The water is not free-flowing and is, therefore, a 'good' under GATT and the North American Free Trade Agreement. So it becomes saleable and controllable, but under the agreements we must give the US always at least what they feel is necessary for their purposes. We can increase the supply in gas and water but we can never cut back. We can never get back what we are giving away. During a crisis we would have to plead with them to rescue us, and in that situation we would, in all likelihood, be treated like Louisiana or some of the poorer states of the US.

A One-World Government In this Free Trade Agreement, the US gets the clean profitable business. Canada is the attic - the warehouse of all the raw materials. Mexico is the boiler room, the basement where all the dirty work is done. That's the plan.

Kralik: Do you see this as a stepping-stone toward the building of a New World Order and its consolidation in a single global economy?

Kealey: Of course. The government that is being set up through the United Nations resembles a church: five percent of receipts goes to the poor - in Somalia, Ethiopia, or whatever - although sometimes, as in Somalia, it comes accompanied with guns. 95% goes toward the maintenance of power and control. What control? The International Monetary Fund, The World Bank, and The Security Council, GATT.

Kralik: Who runs the International Monetary Fund?

Kealey: The bankers.

Kralik: Do you know who these bankers are?

Kealey: There are some fifteen or sixteen different families but by far the two most influential are the Rothschilds and the Rockefellers. Up to the end of the last century the Rothschilds operated strictly in Europe, but they were anxious to synthesize the American operation with their own. Investigators were sent out and it was agreed that a railroad family, the Rockefellers, were prepared to play the game, and so they became the western arm of this operation.

Then in 1913 we have the biggest scam of all: the denationalizing of the making of money and the creation of the Federal Reserve [Bank], a deal between the bankers and the politicians whereby the bankers promised some politicians backing and almost certain re-election in the elections they contended; in return, the politicians handed over to the bankers the right to do nothing less than print the money for the country. 'We'll do that for you," the bankers said, and you can borrow from us.' It was passed on a Friday afternoon with no warning and with Congress pretty well empty. So much for democracy when the invisible bankers really want something.

Kralik: The incredible implication of this is that the Federal Reserve, which prints the greenbacks for the American people, is a private bank.

Kealey: It is a private bank. The same thing happened in Canada, after the customary twenty-year delay - in 1935. MacKenzie King had won, lost, won, lost four elections in a row. He wanted to ensure his hold on the Prime Ministership for a long time, so he in turn gave the bankers The Bank of Canada.

Let us examine the implications of that. Before you give away the Federal Bank there is no need for consumer or income taxes.: you can manufacture an amount of money based on the resources of the country, including its capacity for labour. The value is constantly changing as new minerals are found and the labour force becomes more and more productive. In a situation where the National Government prints money, for every dollar sold to banks two percent remains with the government: that two percent pays the bills.

Kealey: A government should not be there merely for what it does today. There are nine reasons for a government: health, education, welfare, energy, transportation, communications, housing, food, and clothing. Defence is not part of that: if you are not fighting anybody, there is no need for defence. Some countries in the world can't survive on their own because they don't have the resources. There is nothing in Canada that we do not have. In fact, we could make a decision tomorrow that the critical mass of all consumer products needed in Canada would be made in Canada, from Canadian raw materials, by Canadian labour: the result would be that everybody would be employed.

Kralik: Incredible!

Kealey: We have the raw materials, the labour force, but we don't have the plants. The raison d'etre of the Free Trade Agreements being concluded throughout the world is to consolidate international control over a country by making sure that all of the parts needed for the manufacturing of every thing are not made in any one country.

Kralik: So that a country cannot be self-sufficient?

Kealey: The carburettors are built in one place, the exhaust pipes in another, as are the tuners for your VCR. All the parts have been disbursed in different countries, all over the world. No one country can manufacture the parts for everything produced within their own borders. That is, with three notable exceptions: Germany, Japan and the United States - the European Community, the Pacific Community, and the Atlantic Community. A One World government begins by eliminating boundaries, ending up with three regions.

Kralik: Initially?

Kealey: Initially, and then merging them into a One-World government under the United Nations. The Free Trade Agreement between Canada, the US, and Mexico is only the first step of an Agreement that will encompass both the Americas, North and South.

Kralik: Exactly. The South American dimension was only mentioned during the last week.

Kealey: But it has been planned all the way through. You must remember too that the Free Trade Deal was not a negotiation: it was transnational bankers saying to the Governments involved:"This is what you are going to do and here is an implementation schedule.' Everything in the Free Trade Deal had to fit the implementation schedule. The final time slot is 2005.

What is being created is a United Nations in which the rich governments send money to build a fund, the International Monetary Fund, causing the country from which money was sent to borrow more and more money, thus causing more and more debt. Money is then sent to the poor countries, creating a debt there. So everybody is indebted to the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund.

One branch of the Fund holds the money, the other makes the decisions as to how it is to be used, usually for projects that don't go anywhere: these waste money and cause the debt to grow.

Then one day countries can't pay and the bailiff is called. The bailiff is the United Nations Security Council. The real assets of the world, therefore, are re-possessed either by the bank or by the Security Council and are put under the control of the United Nations. Over time the resources of each country are gathered under UN control.

The guy who was in charge of that section is now working in Ontario as the Head of Ontario Hydro: Maurice Strong. Would you like to know why Maurice Strong is working in Ontario? It is because Bob Rae [then-Premier, socialist and a Rhodes Scholar; the current Ontario Premier, Conservative Mike Harris, recently went on a several-day private fishing trip at a remote camp with George Bush - just before the Quebec "crisis" erupted in the neighbouring province!] is in on the deal: he brought Maurice Strong in to do what he does best.

What did Strong do first? He shut down some of the nuclear plants. Why? Because as long as you have nuclear plants you have too much electrical power. If you shut them down, then you can convince people they must dam more rivers. Make a Free Trade deal, move the jobs out of Canada, cause unemployment, and the people of Canada will scream: "Give us jobs! Give us jobs!" Ultimately they will be told: "You want a job? We've got some terrific jobs - building dams!"

Kralik: Is that why only yesterday Chretien signed the Free Trade deal?

Kealey: Chretien is a puppet. He is the Ronald Reagan of Canada. Today Mitchell Sharp is the Prime Minister of Canada. Mitchell Sharp is our George Bush, and he was not elected. He used to be Chretien's boss as Minister of Finance, but today he's got his hand on the back of the puppet [Prime Minister] Jean Chretien.

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Journalists and radio-talk show hosts who would like to interview Glen Kealey or Shelley Anne Clark should call
THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE FOR POLITICAL INTEGRITY, Ottawa,
at 819-778 1705 [fax: 613-747 1644].

Grand Chief of the Quebec Cree, Matthew Coon-Come, can be reached by faxing 818-673 2606, or calling 613-761 1655.

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