Subscribe to Zero-Sum Pfear & Loathing

Belief in viruses is as deadly as the belief in the authority of the state. Many of the freedom community don’t seem to realise that changing the actors won’t free them from the plantation.
The dioxin issue is not going away. It comes up at every community meeting, U.S. senators Vance and Brown have demanded testing, and the EPA is dodging the issue. Something has to give.
Biden said, “You’re not going to rope me into a discussion of hazmat terrorist attacks. The whole point of my conference with Hamas is de-escalating violence in the region. We still have friends in Israel, you know.”
Instead of heading to Tuesday night Bingo or enjoying a nice bowl of Jello, Grandma and Grandpa are going drag racing. They’re using your money to fix the car, and they’ll lecture you about their virtue after they drive it into the lake.
Under the new ideological regime that has taken power both inside the federal bureaucracy and in institutions like UCSF, even medical research has become yet another front in a larger ideological battle.
Violence has always been a part of my world. I write about it in my books and make no apology to anyone.
The failure to report accurately on the Trump-Russia saga for the four years of the Trump presidency is bad enough. Worse, major media organizations, which produced thousands of stories and reports that were false, refuse to engage in a serious postmortem.
This war on birds affects us in many ways. It feeds the “viral” lie and allows for the justification of utterly insane countermeasures to be utilized to protect us from an unseen foe.
For farmers, few examples of those corporate constraints are more frustrating than repair restrictions and patent rights that prevent them from saving seeds from their own crops for future planting.
Beware overtures to ‘personal responsibility’ for the response to COVID, at either the individual or national level. They may be used to deflect from corruption.
We are at a juncture of history where the great resetters are attempting a massive new power grab, and they are putting a lot of work into confusing us and making us forget that we were born free.
Most people think of ignorance as the absence of knowledge. Proctor and others in the field of agnotology argue the opposite — that ignorance is socially constructed in the same way that knowledge is.