Has anyone else noticed how quiet the corporate media has been this week? Not quiet in the sense of lowered volume – that would be something just short of a genuine miracle; but quiet in that they just keep repeating the same tired talking points that long ago had all the life beaten out of them. That’s the kind of quiet I’m talking about. It’s almost like they have something up their sleeves, and they’re just waiting for the greenlight to run with it.
But maybe I’m just over-thinking things in the run-up to the anniversary on Saturday? More on that later, for now – let’s get to it.
If At First You Don’t Succeed…
Those darn Watson boys always seem to be in the lead-off position, don’t they? It must be because they do such good work. Paul gets us started today by reminding us – as if we needed a reminder – that Stockholm Syndrome is a very real and very observable phenomenon.
And another day brings another relatively high-profile “expert” reversal on the origins of the alleged virus.
Speaking of the origins of the alleged virus, much of the material in the FOIA dump that was published by the Intercept this week was not new to those of us in the independent research community. But as Great Game India points out, 900 Pages of Top Secret Docs Expose How the Pandemic Was Planned. The average person is not likely to pay much attention to the two “experts” quoted in the Intercept article, beyond blindly digesting what they say and internalizing it as gospel. So why don’t we go ahead and spend a few moments doing exactly that.
Alina Chan is listed as a post-doc associate at the Broad Institute at MIT, and described as a molecular biologist specializing in gene therapy and cell engineering. Among other credits, Chan is a listed author on the paper Delivering Genes Across the Blood-Brain Barrier: LY6A, a Novel Cellular Receptor for AAV-PHP.B Capsids, first listed on PubMed in November 2019. Although still quite young and early in her scientific career, Chan has suddenly become a corporate media darling as a mouthpiece for the lab-leak hypothesis.
Dr. Richard Ebright has a much more robust biography, as evidenced by this House.Gov document from 2014. I find it extremely interesting that the Intercept chose to quote statements from geneticists for their article, as opposed to – oh, I don’t know – virologists or epidemiologists. But that’s just me; your results may vary.
If you find yourself still wondering how the entire world could be deceived by the obvious fallacies of the COVID narrative, Jon Rappaport outlines how to package and market a global scam-demic with uncanny accuracy.
Wednesday Potluck
It may come as no surprise that I have been warned by some readers about the potential dangers of using the ProtonMail email service. So far, there haven’t been any issues for us at MRO. However, Didi Rankovic explains why ProtonMail Faces Criticism for Complying with Swiss Law for Reclaim the Net. I guess it’s a good thing we’re not based out of Switzerland.
What happened in Clarksville, TN last Saturday night? Nobody seems to know exactly what it was or who was responsible. Or if they do, they’re not talking about it. ZeroHedge reports Mysterious Explosion Shakes Tennessee Ground. A little digging reveals that Clarksville is home to military base Fort Campbell, which this article from Leaf Chronicle explains was once the home of one third of the U.S. nuclear weapons arsenal. I wonder if anyone has measured radiation levels in the area the last couple of days?
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Finally today, we are creeping ever closer to the anniversary that myself and scores of others keep highlighting. James Corbett takes a few minutes out of his busy schedule to give us some details about why he has been so busy lately.
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