Rhythm Sound Intuitive Motion

Joined December 2008
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7 Sep 2020
THE Season for the DreamWeavers, the VisionarySeers, the Heart Keepers, the JoyFeelers, the Peace Redeemers The time & space Designers, the Soul-Tone Aligners, the Nourishment Providers, the Multi-Dimension Wave Riders THE Reality Engineers, The Consciously Supernatural Pioneers
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sam retweeted
Trump says Israel wouldn't exist without him. He goes after Netanyahu in public. He floats the idea that maybe Syria should be the one to handle Hezbollah. He's reportedly unfreezing Iranian money and openings channels for a $300 billion investment. He says he has no interest in regime change in Tehran. And with half the internet insisting Israel owns Washington, despite Epstein files owning these leaders, Trump flatly declares Netanyahu will do whatever he asks. Netanyahu holds a defeatist speech, basically reinforcing Trump's power. Then you have this US-Iran war that gets written off everywhere as the most pointless war in living memory; a war that started, did almost nothing, and stopped. Nobody can hold all of that without it falling apart in their head. If all this looks like paradoxical chaos to you, it means you don't understand geopolitics or in the least, have been brainwashed to interpret reported events as the source of truth. If you've followed me long enough, you know my read and you know I've said all this before. Israel does not run American foreign policy. Israel is the most valuable asset American foreign policy holds, and there's a difference between an asset that's treasured and an asset that has turned into liability. When the principal decides to trade the asset, the asset can't stop him, and a sitting president is disciplining an Israeli prime minister on camera while that prime minister's expansion project becomes inconvenient. For thirty years the region ran on one bet. Iran would eventually lose. Iran played the boogeyman, forever two weeks from a bomb and never getting there, the permanent and defeat-able threat. That role paid everyone. It kept American forces, arms sales, and leverage in the region under the banner of containment. It gave the defense machine a procurement cycle with no end date. It gave Israel cover to run its expansion under an existential enemy. And it paid Iran, who got reach and Shia influence across Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Yemen, and a standing on the Arab street no Arab government could match. As long as everyone assumed Iran would eventually be beaten, the smart move was to keep the tension at exactly the right temperature and never let it boil. A controlled threat, not an existential one. The conflict was the product. Then Iran stopped digging its own grave. Tehran looked at the boogeyman role and decided it no longer paid, because the proxies that once kept Israel from finishing its work had become the ceiling on Iran's own future, the thing locking it out of the Gulf normalization track and the capital flows and the integrated order the Gulf and BRICS were building. So Iran started shedding the skin. Proxies phased down. Strikes on its own commanders absorbed with a calm that doesn't match a state fighting for survival. The moment Iran moved, everyone's math moved. The Gulf doesn't want a war, because it's mid-construction on an economic project a war would burn down, and a calm Iran inside the tent is worth more to Riyadh than a bombed Iran outside it. The transnational private sector doesn't want it either, because no version of a real US-Iran war avoids the Strait of Hormuz, an oil shock, a global recession, and a generational bill, and the people who allocate capital in Washington have no appetite to pay it. That left one player whose project still needed the old game running. Netanyahu's expansion faction, the one actor who still needed the existential enemy, because the enemy was the permission slip for everything else. So what was the point of the war? The war was a soft landing built to avoid the real one. A settlement like this normally dies in the room because nobody trusts anybody to move first. A managed crisis fixes that. Under the cover of a war nobody has to move first and nobody has to trust anybody, everybody moves at once, and the war becomes the enforcement no treaty could provide. Iran got to shed its proxies signaling compliance to opponents, while telling its base it was overwhelmed, not betrayed. Netanyahu got to claim he neutralized the threat while complying. The defense machine got its activity. The Gulf got the board cleared. Every player walked out of that pointless war with an unsolvable problem solved. Same with Syria, where everyone got the read backwards. Assad's fall didn't hand Syria to Israel. The mercenary tools that broke Syria in 2011 under American and Israeli handlers are now under Turkish and Gulf handlers, and the agenda flipped from fragmentation to consolidation. A unified Syria under Ankara and the Gulf is a wall against Israeli expansion, which is why Israel kept bombing a country it supposedly just won. When Trump says maybe Syria should handle Hezbollah, he's handing the cleanup to the new owner of the neighborhood. The cleanup guy changed. The $300 billion is predominantly Gulf money, and will be routed to Wall St players. A calm, integrated Iran isn't a security headache to the people who allocate capital. It's a market. Reconstruction, energy, a hundred million consumers, a new node in the trade architecture the Gulf is building. For thirty years war was the product. Now integration is the product, and the $300 billion is the TPS entry fee. None of this is paradoxical. Everything can be clearly mapped out if you choose to submerge your ego, deprogram what the West has taught you and your misunderstanding of who is in charge. Some have woken up. Most still haven't. I have been saying all this for almost 2 years on here. Go through my timeline. There is no paradox. Private sector power has decided to swap military-first foreign policy in the Middle East, to a policy of economic boom. For that to happen, de-militarization, de-nuclearization must be conducted across the region. This is coming. Like I've said this was coming for almost 2 years now. And once Middle East settles, in the way I have said it will, the next seismic shift is in Central Asia, the band of former Soviet republics wedged between Russia, China, and Iran. It will break into an open great-power contest somewhere 2-3 years from now. Again I am calling this early. And once again, hardly anyone outside a few mining desks and foreign-policy shops will see this coming.
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In 1994 when ANC got into government with NP , over 1 million Whites worked for the government and SOEs. Whites of working age in South Africa have never been more than 2m so 50% of Whites were employed by the state. In OECD countries 25% of workforce is public servants, in South Africa it's currently less than 8%. Remove the ANC as soon as possible otherwise "suffer baby , suffer"
[WATCH] “There is no government that's going to create employment.” Minister in the Presidency Khumbuzo Ntshavheni says the government will create opportunities for economic development and growth. #YouthMonth2026 #YouthDay #June16th
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Liberal Democracy can never work in Africa, it opens too many doors for continued colonialism posing as "freedom" such as former colonisers posing as "foreign investors" imposing same policies from colonial era but with a false claim of "property rights" , "rule of law" and "freedom of trade"
Is democracy the best path to development for every African country?
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This piece of literature by Fredrick Lugard should be compulsory across entire African continent because it explains how these "tribal" or "ethnic" identities were given by the colonists and missionary "educated" Natives. People such as Theophilus Shepstone applied these methods in Southern Africa
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The Americans will sign the deal. They will respect it. So will Iran. Iran will have their money unfrozen. Violence in the region is coming to a permanent end.
1. The Americans will not sign the deal 2. If they do (to buy time for fuckery and war), they will not respect it 3. Iran will never get its stolen money back 4. Violence is the only way to get rid of colonial infestation
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Many Natives are not aware that Mobutu was installed by the Oppenheimers after removal later assassination of Lumumba, the Oppenheimers also groomed current President Ramaphosa. The GNU is funded by the same Oppenheimers hence you find people like Zibi in parliament
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"One Africa" cannot exist overnight, Africans have this tendency of seeking to be assimilated among former colonisers who had nothing solid to build in Africa but to facilitate the export of resources to their mother countries. In Africa today you find "middle classes" who cannot build a school for own children and "middle class" is merely aesthetic or consumption based because everything is mimicry not defined by needs and aspirations of Africans
Replying to @cecild84
You can be Pan Africanist and still demand legal immigration. In fact, Pan Africanism has nothing to do with immigration, legal or illegal. If the “one continent” narrative is so great, they should try to enter or reside in Rwanda without proper documentation and see what Kagame will do to them. This document-free, one-Africa persuasion can also be tried in Egypt, Morroco, Algeria or Somalia. South Africa isn’t the custodian of pseudo Pan Africanist theorisation.
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Did you know modern medicine was built on the back of the oil industry? ​In AntiViral Ep. 10, dive into how John D. Rockefeller weaponized germ "theory" to crush homeopathy & other therapies, monopolize medical schools, & turn his oil byproducts into patentable pharmaceuticals.
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I found some !Kora Index notes😁 Ihansi - gas Icosi - |xaib, |xais Ukuncoma - |xom Ukugexa (umgexo) - xa Ukwexwaya - kx'uixa-a Inkukhu - kukuru Cutha, cupha - |naub (hide) Inxuluma - ||xaub Insele - |hirseb Ihhashi - has Isiqwayi - !'oas Ukuxova - !'xo Ukugwaza - koas (knife)
Everyday words and their connection to "Khoisan" languages before iBhola😄 cha -> |xa (cha)-> to deny in Khwe Chama -> |xam (cham)-> urinate in Khwe Gcoba -> |hobo -> to anoint in khwe Kweqa -> !ka (qha) -> to jump in "San" Kgomotsha -> khom -> to talk in khwe Thread 🧵
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sam retweeted
Everyday words and their connection to "Khoisan" languages before iBhola😄 cha -> |xa (cha)-> to deny in Khwe Chama -> |xam (cham)-> urinate in Khwe Gcoba -> |hobo -> to anoint in khwe Kweqa -> !ka (qha) -> to jump in "San" Kgomotsha -> khom -> to talk in khwe Thread 🧵
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The basic cost of living in the country for a small family is almost R6k just on food , let's not render this conversation on "tribalism" , "classism", and "xenophobia" talking points. Yes , Patricia stop paying Karabo R500 for work you and your husband must be able to do like looking after your child , if not you and your husband must earn more and fight it with HR where YOU both work
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Hire the 13 million unemployed into the broad state machinery. Build the services infrastructure to support them. Fund GCF accordingly. Reignite the engineering and manufacturing sector, by lifting the destructive underinvestment. Anything else is faffery and fluffery.
BREAKING NEWS | South Africa’s GDP increases by 0.5% in the first quarter of 2026, following a 0.4% rise in the fourth quarter of 2025: Stats SA
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The formula is simple: Cast a wide net with broad symptom labels first, and then sort with testing later. The generated cases can be inflated or deflated at will depending on the desired narrative. ​Read the full breakdown in the ViroLIEgy Booster: viroliegynewsletter.substack…
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The Testing Trap in action: 900 “suspected” Ebola cases came from labeling anyone with any Ebola-like symptoms as a case (WHO). Those “symptoms?" Identical to everyday regional illnesses: “flu, malaria or typhoid.” Non-specific criteria → inflated numbers → amplified fear.
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The portion that parties & politicians receive from the state is not the problematic part. The problematic part is the portion they receive from corporations and the super rich, in return for policies, tenders and exclusive licenses that end up costing SAns far more. The rand issuing state can always afford to finance all political party funding, without fear or favour, and to ban private donations, and doing so will cost the public less than the costs of corruption involving private “donations”.
Forget the hype about which private individuals are giving money to political parties. That pales in comparison to the vast sums parties receive from taxpayers. South Africans are the biggest backers of political parties, and these amounts keep growing through the budgets that parties themselves approve. f.mtr.cool/tfkzxgjamn
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The private sector uses investment pledges to lure the government to deregulate, and then it refuses to follow through while gaining an easier regulatory space even if they continue underperforming. Businesses no longer produce, they increase profits through accounting without increasing manufacturing.
Jun 8
Despite all the investment pledges, the cement industry remains poorly performing.
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We don't need a better example than ZanuPF in Zimbabwe, they have completely replaced the Rhodesians only to adopt the WORST characteristics from the settlers such as hoarding land, penchant for conspicuous consumption and elitism while the rest of the population flees or attempts to survive under this new colonial government administered by Africans
Replying to @MxolisiBob
Their mission was not to liberate natives ,they wanted to replace the whites and live like them .that's why a revolution is needed to remove them power .
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This daft laddie wants us to think the evil Xi is forcibly deindustrialising the West - as if that wasn't a deed already done by private investors who had prepared for it from the 1950s - and expects said investors to pour billions into automated industries that won't employ too many workers to make stuff consumers can't afford. Then he coyly mentions 'national security' and 'Russian invasion' at the end as if that's not what he's really boostering for - the military industrial complex and its ancillaries. Which, coincidentally, is also needed by Israel.
Europe can't afford to adhere to free-trade dogma when it comes to the flood of Chinese imports. noahpinion.blog/p/why-europe…
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This video explains another big question: why Chinese high-speed railways are not profitable, yet China still keeps building them. That’s because of the long-term calculation of overall social interests by the central government, "The HSR drives the flow of people, traffic and info and all social flows… The incentives on the economy are immeasurable. We always calculate the whole economic impact. It’s about overall social interests."
‘The superiority of socialism is clear’ In the 1980s, California was talking about high-speed rail while China barely had highways. Forty years later, the US still doesn't have a high-speed rail network, while China has built the world's largest.
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Well ..... British parliament in 1905, "Botha and Delarey do not deny in their evidence that there is a want of labour even for the farms, and they also say that they are against the introduction of Chinese labour. But what do they propose? Cronje would make a law which would compel the blacks to work, and Botha and Delarey would break up the locations. They would not allow large collections of blacks as in Basutoland or in Zambezia. They would distribute the blacks on the farms, taxing them less provided they performed such service. Another plan was that bribes should be given to the chiefs on condition that they sent labour"
Do you have any written proof of what you are saying? Will you please share the written proof.
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