miércoles, 30 de abril de 2025

Quiet Morning

Quiet Morning

Joe Rogan Experience #2308 - Jordan Peterson

Heinrich Schütz (1585-1672) - Matthäus Passion

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Thomas Binder- Planeando la próxima plandemia

 

Un post de Thomas Binder sobre la manipulación de las políticas y protocolos sanitarios a manos de autoridades corruptas y de las grandes farmacéuticas, durante la crisis del Covid, es censurado como desinformación por las grandes tecnológicas (este post fue censurado en su momento por Google-Blogger). Las cifras sobre tasas de infección y contagio pueden manipularse fácilmente resultando en una "Plandemia" de tests sanitarios, que despierta un alarmismo público indebido y un mal uso de las políticas públicas, a la par que las voces de quienes denuncian estas cuestiones son silenciadas de modo sistemático. Esta colusión muestra cómo se ha gestionado torticeramente la opinión pública y se ha manipulado usando las cuestiones e instituciones de la sanidad pública como vehículos para estafas a gran escala y corrupción organizada a nivel global.


English abstract: A post by Thomas Binder on the manipulation of health policies and protocols by corrupt officials and Big Pharma during the Covid crisis was censored as disinformation by Big Tech. Data about infection rates can be easily manipulated resulting in a "plandemic" of health testing raising undue concerns and misuse of public policies, while voices denouncing these issues are systematically silenced. This collusion shows the way public opinion has been mismanaged and manipulated using public health concerns and institutions as vehicles for rackets, corruption and profiteering at a global scale.

 

_____. "Planeando la próxima plandemia." In García Landa, Vanity Fea 8 June 2024.* (Thomas Binder).

         https://vanityfea.blogspot.com/2024/06/planeando-la-siguiente-plandemia.html

         2024 DISCONTINUED 2024 – Censored by Blogger.

_____."Thomas Binder - Planeando la próxima Plandemia." Net Sight de José Angel García Landa 20 Jan. 2025.*

https://personal.unizar.es/garciala/publicaciones/planeando.pdf

         2025

_____. "Thomas Binder – Planeando la próxima Plandemia." Academia 30 April 2025.*

         https://www.academia.edu/129112393/

         2025


Hi there

 

Hi there

El Gato al Agua | ESPECIAL EL APAGÓN | 29/04/25

Another Monolith

 

Another Monolith

¡Llegó el Blackout! El Gran Apagón

Bibliografía sobre LENGUA INGLESA

Seguimos subiendo listados a nuestro blog bibliográfico. Muchos de ellos sobre Filología inglesa:

Bibliografía sobre la LENGUA INGLESA https://bibliojagl.blogspot.com/2025/04/ingles-lengua-inglesa.html 

Bibliografía sobre LENGUA INGLESA (cuestiones específicas) https://bibliojagl.blogspot.com/2025/04/lengua-inglesa-cuestiones-especificas.html

Un árbol en una isla en una ría

 

Un árbol en una isla en una ría

Sánchez, el gran apagón

Retropost, 2015: Free Four (4)

 

Measuring the Moon

 

Measuring the Moon 2

Causas del gran apagón en España y Portugal

Retropost, 2015: Went to See the Gypsy (2)

 Foto 1

POTENCIANDO EL TALENTO

 





La amplia playa

 

La amplia playa

Es impresentable que Sánchez no haya sido capaz de explicar las causas del apagón

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APAGÓN EXPLICADO y CULPABLES IDENTIFICADOS

martes, 29 de abril de 2025

¡DIMISIÓN Y CÁRCEL!

 


Dimisión y Cárcel

 Y esto hace apenas unos días:

Estafadores...





Mujer de la toalla

 

Mujer de la toalla

Childhood's End (4)

 Una de Pink Floyd. Muy vieja, recuerdo oírla cuando aún vivía en Biescas en los setenta.

¿Qué ha podido pasar en el gran apagón? Un aviso no escuchado

lunes, 28 de abril de 2025

Frente al barco

 

Frente al barco

Retropost, 2015: My Melancholy Blues

 

Retropost, 2015: Oscar en Bournemouth

 Como yo en 1980.

Oscar en Bournemouth

El Arte (Dramático) de la Vida

 

 Henry Fielding, Amelia, I.1

Capítulo Primero: Que sirve de Introducción:

Veránse en esta Historia los diversos accidentes que sucedieron a dos dignos esposos después de su unión con los estrechos lazos del matrimonio. La mayor parte de las desgracias que tuvieron que sufrir fueron tan grandes, y los incidentes que las causaron tan extraordinarios, que parecen haber apurado toda la malicia y las invenciones más exquisitas que la superstición atribuye a la Fortuna. Que la Fortuna pueda tener parte en nuestras cosas, ni aun que exista semejante ente en el Universo, es lo qeu yo me guardaré muy bien de decir. En todos tiempos ha sido injusta con la Fortuna la voz pública, atribuyéndole gran número de sucesos, en los cuales no tiene ella parte alguna. Muy duro se me hace que no sea posible explicar por medios naturales la ventura de los malvados, las desgracias de los necios y todas las miserias que las personas sensatas se acarrean ellas mismas muchas veces por abandonar las sendas de la prudencia, y seguir ciegamente los movimientos de su pasión dominante; en una palabra, todos aquellos acontecimientos de que se acusa por lo ordinario a la Fortuna, aunque no se tenga más fundamento para ello ,que el que uno que juega mal tiene para quejarse de su desgracia en el ajedrez.

Si los hombres maldicen las más veces sin motivo a este ente imaginario, también se hallarán precisados a recompensarle de este agravio, dándole en otras ocasiones el honor que no merece tampoco. Salir de las tristes consecuencias de una imprudente conducta, vencer a la desgracia luchando valerosamente contra ella, es uno de los más nobles esfuerzos de la prudencia y de la virtud. Y así el que llamase a semejante hombre afortunado, se explicaría tan impropiamente como el que diese el mismo nombre a un Escultor o a un Poeta por haber hecho una Venus o una Ilíada.

La vida, así como cualquier otra cosa  puede ser mirada como un arte, y no deben tenerse los grandes incidentes de ella por casualidad, como no se tienen por tales los diferentes miembros de una Estatua, o de un excelente Poema. Los Críticos no se contentan con ver en todo esto que una cosa es grande; quieren saber cómo y por qué lo es. Examinando con cuidado los diferentes grados, por los cuales todo modelo llega a la perfección, aprendemos a conocer verdaderamente la ciencia que con este modelo se ha formado. Ahora, pues, las historias del género de ésta pueden, con razón, pasar por modelos de la Vida Humana, y así el reflexionar sobre las particularidades de los diversos incidentes que se enderezan a la catástrofe o al complemento del todo, y sobre las más pequeñas causas que han atraído estos incidentes, es el medio más propio para instruirnos en la más útil de todas las artes, que yo llamo El Arte de la Vida.

 

Cómo está la Iglesia

sábado, 26 de abril de 2025

Una barca en el puerto me espera

 

Una barca en el puerto me espera  

Una barca en el puerto me espera... https://youtu.be/uJ_iQxiF7-I 

 —oOo—

Mark Knopfler - One Deep River

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UK Supreme Court Ruling on WOMEN and gender: The Triumph Of Reality | Louise Perry

   

Anderson, John. "UK Supreme Court Ruling [on Women, Gender and Transsexuality]: The Triumph Of Reality – Louise Perry." Video interview. YouTube (John Anderson Media) 24 April 2025.*

https://youtu.be/wetQq_5DMCk

         2025

 

_____

 

Morton, Becky. "Greens Call for Single-Sex Guidance to Be Withdrawn." BBC 27 April 2023.*

         https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g355v07l2o

         2025


Ría baja 2

 

Ría baja 2

Hablan víctimas de los pinchazos




Ladrón de Guevara, Ernesto, et al. "Reflexiones con Ladrón de Guevara 26/04/2025." Audio. Ivoox (Reflexiones con Ladrón de Guevara) 26 April 2025.* (Covid-19 vaccines adverse effects).

https://go.ivoox.com/rf/145625481

         2025

 

 

 







Coche enjaulado

 

Coche enjaulado

viernes, 25 de abril de 2025

Visions of Johanna

Hoy me temo que he jubilado finalmente mi guitarra marinera, la que lleva incrustaciones de conchas y marisco. Desafinada, e inafinable, tuvo tiempos mejores—conmigo no mucho mejores, empero. 

Esta 'Visions of Johanna' era de cuando sonaba mejor, sin exagerar. También era la primera vez que la tocaba, la canción digo.


  


Descanse en paz, la vieja guitarra. En una esquina se ha quedado apoyada, para los restos del tiempo.

 

—oOo—

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Jordan Peterson on grooming gangs, why very few people can think and why Tommy Robinson Is Like Him

 




Claves del día: ¿La gran victoria de Trump?, Vladimir, STOP! y el fin del dinero en efectivo

Retropost, 2015: Muñoz Molina sobre 'la cátedra'

En Retrospection, after all these years:


Pink Floyd - The Division Bell (30th Anniversary Full Album)

The Tide Is Low

 

The Tide Is Low

CLOE Y CANDY, y otras historias "progresistas" (ejem) con las que alucinarán

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Nero's Dramaturgy

According to Suetonius (The Twelve Caesars, trans. Robert Graves, 1964):

 

Nero started off with a parade of virtue: giving Claudius a lavish funeral, at which he delivered the oration in person, and finally deifying him. He also exalted the memory of his father Domitius, and turned over all his public and private affairs to Agrippina's management. On the day of his accession the password he gave to the colonel on duty was 'The Best of Mothers'; and she and he often rode out together through the streets in her litter. Nero founded a colony at Antium consisting of Guards veterans, augmented by a group of rich retired centurions, whom he forced to move ther; and also built them a harbour, at great expense. 

As a further guarantee of his virtuous intentions, he promised to model his rule on the principles laid down by Augustus, and never missed an opportunity of being generous or merciful, or of showing what a good companion he was. He lowered, if he could not abolish, some of the heavier taxes; and reduced by three-quarters the fee for denouncing evasions of the Papian Law, which obliged noblement to marry.  Moreover, he presented the commons with forty gold pieces each; settled annual salaries on distinguished but impoverished senators—to the amount of 5,000 gold pieces in some cases—and granted the Guards battalions a free monthly issue of grain. If asked to sign the usual execution order for a felon, he would sigh: 'Ah, how I wish that I had never learned to write!' He seldom forgot a face, and would greet men of whatever rank by name without a moment's hesitation. Once, when the Senate passed a vote of thanks to him, he answered: 'Wait until I deserve them!' He allowed even the commons to watch him taking exercise on the Campus Martius, and often gave public declamations. Also, he recited his own poems, both at home and in the Theatre; a performance which so delighted everyone that a special Thanksgiving was voted him, as though he had won a great victory, and the passages he had chosen were printed in letters of gold on plaques dedicated to Capitoline Jupiter.

He gave an immense variety of entertainments—coming-of-age parties, chariot races in the Circus, stage plays, a gladiatorial show—persuading even old men of consular rank, and old ladies, too, to attend the coming-of-age parties. He reserved seats for the Knights at the Circus, as he had done in the Theatre; and actually raced four-camel chariots! At the Great Festival, as he called the series of plays devoted to the hope of his reigning for ever, parts were taken by men and women of both Orders; and one well-known knight rode an elephant down a sloping tight-rope. When he staged 'The Fire', a Roman play by Afranius, the actors were allowed to keep the valuable furnishings they rescued from the burning house. Throughout the Festival all kinds of gifts were scattered to the people —1,000 assorted birds daily, and quantities of food parcels; besides vouchers for corn, clothes, gold, silver, precious stones, pearls, paintings, slaves, transport animals, and even trained wild beasts—and finally for ships, blocks of City tenements, and farms.

Nero watched from the top of the proscenium. The gladiatorial show took place in a wooden theatre, near the Campus Martius, which had been built in less than a year; but no one was allowed to be killed during these combats, not even criminals. He did, however, make 400 senators and 600 knights, many of them rich and respectable, do battle in the arena; and some had to fight wild beasts and perform various duties about the ring. He staged a naval engagement on an artificial lake of salt water which had sea-monsters swimming in it; also a ballet performance by certain young Greeks, to whom he presented certificates of Roman citizenship when their show ended. At one stage of the Minotaur ballet an actor, disguised as a bull, actually mounted another who played Pasiphäe and occupied the hindquarters of a hollow wooden heifer—or that, at least, was the audience's impression. In the Daedalus and Icarus ballet, the actor who played Icarus, while attempting his first flight, fell beside Nero's couch and spattered him with blood. 

Nero rarely presided at shows of this sort, but would recline in the closed Imperial box and watch through a window; later, however, he opened the box. He inaugurated the Neronia, a festival of copetitions in music, gymnastics, and horsemanship, modelled on the Greek ones and held every five years; and simultaneously opened his Baths, which had a gymnasium attached, and provided free oil for knights and senators. Ex-consuls, drawn by lot, organized the Neronia, and occupied the Praetors' seats. At the prize-giving Nero descended to the orchestra-stalls where the Senators sat, to accept the laurel wreath for Latin oratory and verse, which had been reserved for him by the unanimous vote of all the distinguished competitors. The judges also awarded him the wreath for a lyre solo, but he bowed reverently to them and said 'Pray lay it on the ground before Augustus's statue!' At an athletic competition held in the Enclosure, oxen were sacrificed on a lavish scale; that was when he shaved his chin for the first time, put the hair in a pearl-studded gold box and dedicated it to Capitoline Jupiter. He had invited the Vestal Virgins to watch the athletics, explaining that Demeter's priestess at Olympia were accorded the same privilege.

The welcome given Tiridates when he visited Rome deserves inclusion in the list of Neros' spectacles. Cloudy weather prevented Tiridates from being displayed to the people on the day fixed by Imperial edict; however, Nero brought him out as soon as possible afterwards. The Guards battalions marched in full armour around the temples of the Forum, while Nero occupied his curule chair on the Rostrum, wearing triumphal dress and surrounded by military insignia and standards. Tiridates had to walk up a ramp and then prostrate himself in supplication; whereupon Nero stretched out his hand, drew him to his feet, kissed him, and replaced his turban with a diadem. When Tiridates's supplication had been translated into Latin by an interpreter and publicly recited, he was taken to the Theatre (where he made a further supplication) and offered a seat on Nero's right. The people then hailed Nero as a conqueror and, after dedicating a laurel-wreath in the Capitol, he closed the double doors of the Temple of Janus, as a sign that all war was at an end. 

 

(...)

 

I have separated this catalogue of Nero's less atrocious acts—some forgiveable, some even praiseworthy—from the others; but I must begin to list his follies and crimes.

Music formed part of his childhood curriculum, and he early developed a taste for it. Soon after his accession, he summoned Terpnus, the greatest lyre-player of the day, to sing to him when dinner had ended, for several nights in succession, until very late. Then, little by little, he began to study and practise himself, and conscientiously undertook all the usual exercises for strengthening and developing the voice. He would lie on his back with a slab of lead on his chest, use enemas and emetics to keep down his weight, and refrain from eating apples and every other food considered deleterious to the vocal chords. Ultimately, though his voice was still feeble and  husky, he was pleased enough with his progress to nurse theatrical ambitions, and would quote to his friends the Greek proverb: 'Unheard melodies are never sweet'. His first stage appearance was at Naples where, disregarding and earthquake,*

* It collapsed just after the audience had dispersed.

he sang his piece thorugh to the end. He often performed at Naples, for several consecutive days, too; and even while giving his voice a brief rest, could not stay away from the theatre, but went to dine in the orchestra where he promised the crowd in Greek that, when he had downed a drink or two, he would give them something to make their ears ring. So captivated was he by the rhythmic applause of some Alexandrian sailors from a fleet which had just put in, that he sent to Egypt for more. He also chose a few young knight, and more than 5,000 ordinary youths, whom he divided into claques to learn the Alexandrian method of applause—they were known, respectively, as 'Bees', 'Roof-tiles', and 'Brick-bats'—and provide it liberally whenever he sang.*

*The Bees made a loud humming noise. The Roof-tiles clapped with their hollowed hands; the Brick-bats, flat-handed.

It was easy to recognize them by their bushy hair, splendid dress, and the absence of rings on their left hands. The knights who led them earned four gold pieces a performance.

Appearances at Rome meant so much to Nero that he held the Neronia again before the required five years elapsed. When the crowd clamored to hear his heavenly voice, he answered that he would perform in the Palace gardens later if anyone really wanted to hear him; but when the Guards on duty seconded the appeal, he delightedly agreed to oblig them. He wasted no time in getting his name entered on the list of competing lyre-players, and dropped his ticket into the urn with the others. Guards colonels carried his lyre as he went up to play, and a group of military tribunes and close friends accompanied him. After taking his place and briefly begging the audience's kind attention, he made Cluvius Rufus, the ex-Consul, announce the title of the song. It was the whole of the opera Niobe; and he sang on until two hours before dusk. Since this allowed the remaining competitors no chance to perform, he postponed the award of a prize to the following year, which would give him another opportunity to sing. But since a year was a long time to wait, he continued to make frequent appearances. He toyed with the ide of playing professional actors in public shows staged by magistrates; because one of the Praetors had offered him 10,000 gold pieces if he would consent. And he did actually appear in operatic tragedies, taking the parts of heroes and gods, sometimes even of heroines and goddesses, wearing masks either modelled on his own face, or on the face of whatever woman happened to be his current mistress. Among his performances were Canace in Childbirth, Orestes the Matricide, Oedipus Blinded, and Distraught Hercules. There is a story that a young recruit on guard in the wings recognized him in the rags and fetters demanded by the part of Hercules, and dashed boldly to his assistance. 

Horses had been Nero's main interest since childhood; whatever his tutors might do, they could never stop his chatter about the chariot races at the Circus. When scolded by one of them for telling his fellow-pupils about a Leek-Green charioteer who had the misfortune to get dragged by his team, Nero untruthfully explained that he had been discussing Hector's fate in the Iliad. At the beginning of his reign he used every day to play with model ivory chariots on a board, and came up from the country to attend all the races, even minor ones. at first in secret and then without the least embarrassment; so that there was never any doubt at Rome when he would be in residence. He frankly admitted that he wished the number of prizes increased, which meant that the contests now lasted until a late hour and the faction-managers no longer thought it worth while to bring out their teams except for a full day's racing. 

Very soon Nero set his heart on driving a chariot himself, in a regular race, and after a preliminary trial in the Palace gardens before an audience of slaves and loungers, made a public appearance at the Circus; on this occasion one of his freedmen replaced the magistrate who dropped the napkin as the starting signal.

However, these amateur incursions into the arts at Rome did not satisfy him, and he headed for Greece, as I mentioned above. His main reason was that the cities which regularly sponsored musical contests had adopted the practice of sending him every available prize for lyre-playing; he always accepted those with great pleasure, giving the delegates the earliest audience of the day and invitations to private dinners. They would beg Nero to sing when the meal was over, and applaud his performance to the echo, which made him announce: 'The Greeks alone arr worthy of my genius; they really listen to music.' So he sailed off hastily and, as soon as he arrived at Cassiope, gave his first song recital before the altar of Jupiter Cassius; after which he went the round of all the contests.

He ordered these contests which normally took place only at long intervals to be held during his visit, even if it meant repeating them; and brok tradition at Olympia by introducing a musical co petition into the athletic games. When Halius, his freeman-secretary, reminded him that he was urgently needed at Rome, he would not be distracted by official business, but answered: 'Yes, you have made yourself quite plain. I am aware that you want me to go home; you will do far better, however, if you encourage me to stay until I have proved myself worthy of my reputation.'

No one was allowed to leave the theatre during his recitals, however pressing the reason, and the gates were kept barred. We read of women in the audience giving birth, and of men being so bored with the music and the applause that they furtively dropped down from the wall at the rear, or shammed dead and were carried away for burial. Nero's stage fright and general nervousness, his jealousy of rivals, and his awe of the judges, were more easily seen than believed. Though usually gracious and charming to other competitors, whom he treated as equals, he abused them behind their backs, and often insulted them to their faces; and if any were particularly good singers, he would bribe them not to do themselves justice. Before every performance he would address the judges wit hthe utmost deference, saying that he had done what he could, and that the issue was now in Fortune's hands; but that since they were men of judgement and experience, they would know how to eliminate the factor of chance. When they told him not to worry he felt a little better, but still anxious; and mistook the silence of some for severity, and the embarrassment of others for disfavour, admitting that he suspected every one of them.

He strictly observed the rules, never daring to clear his throat an even using his arm, rather than a handkerchief, to wipe the sweat from his brow. Once, while actin in a tragedy, he dropped his sceptre and quickly recovered it, but was terrified of disqualification. The accompanist, however—who played a flute and made the necessary dumbshow to illustrated the words—swore the slip had passed unnoticed, because the audience were listening with such rapt attention; so he took heart again. Nero insisted on announcing his own victories; which emboldened him to enter the competition for heralds. To destroy every trace of previous winners in these contests he ordered all their statues and busts to be taken downk, dragged away with hooks, and hurled into public privies. On several occasions he took part in hte chariot racingt, and at Olympia drove a ten-horse team, a novelty for which he had censured King Mithridates in one of his own poems. He lost his balance, fell from the chariot and had to be helped in again; but, though he failed to stay the course and retired before the finish, the judges nevertheless awarded him the prize. On the eve of his departure, he presented the whole province with its freedom and conferred Roman citizenship as well as large cash rewards on the judges. It was during the Isthmian Games at Corinth that he stood in the middle of the stadium and personally announced these benefits.

Returning to Italy, Nero disembarked at Naples, where he had made his debut as a singer, and ordered part of the city wall to be razed—which is the Greek custom whenever the victory in any of the Sacred Games comes home. He repreated the same performance at Antium, at Alba Longa, and finally at Rome. For his processional entry into Rome he chose tha charion which Augustus had used in his triumph nearly a hundred years previously; and wore a Greek mantle spangled with gold stars over a purple robe. The Olympic wreath was on his head, the Pythian wreath in his right hand, the others were carried before him, with placards explaining where and against whom he had won them, what songs he had sung, and in what plays he had acted. Nero's chariot was followed by his regular claque, who shouted that they ware Augustus's men celebrating Augustus's triuph. The procession passed through the Circus (he had the entrance arch pulled down to allow more room, then by way of the Velabrum and the Forum to the Palatine Hill and the Temple of Apollo. Victims were sacrificed in his honour all along the route, which was sprinkled with perfume, and the commons showered him with song-birds, ribbons, and sweetmeats as compliments on his voice. He hung the wreaths above the couches in his sleeping quarters, and set up several stautes of himself playing the lyre. He also had a coin struck with the same device. After this, it never occurred to him that he ought to refrain from singing, or even sing a little less; but he saved his voice by addressing the troops only in written orders, or in speeches delivered by someone else; and would attend no entertainment or official business unless he had a voice-trainer standing by, telling him when to spare his vocal chords, and when to protect his mouth with a handkerchief. Whether he offered people his friendship or plainly indicated his dislike for them, often depended on how generously or how feebly they had applauded.  

It might have been possible to excuse his insolent, lustful, extravagant, greedy, or cruel early practices (which were, I grant, more furtive than aggressive), by saying that boys will be boys; yet at the same time, this was clearly the true Nero, not merely Nero in his adolescence. As soon as night fell he would snatch a hat or cap and make a round of the taverns, or prowl the streets in search of mischief—and not always innocent mischief either, because one of his games was to attack men on their way home from dinner, stab them if they offered resistence, and then drop their bodies down the sewers. He would also break into shops, afterwards opening a miniature market at the Palace with the stolen goods, dividing them up into lots, auctioning them himself, and squandering the proceeds. During these escapades he often risked being blinded or killed—once he was beaten almost to death by a senator whose wife he had molested, which taught him never to go out after dark unless an escort of senior officers was following him at a discreet distance. He would even secretly visit the Theatr by day, in a sedan chair, and watch the quarrels among the pantomime actors, cheering them on from the top of the proscenium; then, when they cam to blows and fought it out with stones and broken benches, he joined in the fun by throwing things on the heads of the crowd. On one occasion he fractured a praetor's skull. 

Gradually Nero's vices gained the upper hand: he no longer tried to laugh them off, or hide, or deny them, but turned quite brazen. His  feasts now lasted from noon till midnight, with an occasional break for diving into a warm bath or, if it were summer, into snow-cooled water. Sometimes he would drain the artificial lake in the Campus Martius, or the other in the Circus, and hold public dinner parties there, including prostitutes and dancing-girls from all over the City among his guests. Whenever he floated down the Tiber to Ostia, or cruised past Baiae, he had a row of temporary brothels erected along the shore, where s number of noblewomen, pretending to be madams, stood waiting to solicit his cusstom. He also forced his friends to provide him with dinners; one of them spent 40,000 gold pieces on a turban party, and another even more on a rose banquet. 

Not satisfied wit hseducing free-born boys and married women, Nero raped the Vestal Virgin Rubria. He nearly contrived to marry the freedwoman Acte, by persuading some friends of consular rank to swear falsely that she came of royal stock. Having tried to turn the boy Sporus into a girl by castration, he went through a wedding ceremon y with him—dowry, bridal veil and all—which the whole Court attended; then brought him home, and treated him as a wife. He dressed Sporus in the fine clothes normally worn by an Empress and took him in his own litter not only to every Greek assize and fair, but actually through the Street of Images at Rome, kissing him amorously now and then. A rather amusing joke is still going the rounds: the world would have been aa happier place had Nero's father Domitius married that sort of wife.

The passion he felt for his mother, Agrippina, was notorious, but her enemies would not let him consummate it, fearing that, if he did, she would become even more powerful and ruthless than hitherto. So he found a new mistress who was said to be her spit and image: some say that he did, in fact, commit incet with Agrippina every time they rode in the same litter—the state of his clothes when he emerged proved it.

Nero practised every kind of obscenity, and at last invented a novel game: he was released from a den dressed in the skins of wild animals, and attacked the private parts of men and women who stood bound to stakes. After working up sufficient excitement by this means, he was despatched—shall we say?—by his freedman Doryphorus. Doryphorus now married him—just as he himself had married Sporus—and on the wedding night he imitated the screams and moans of a girl being deflowered. According to my informants he was convinced that nobody could remain sexually chaste, but that most people concealed their secret vices; hence, if anyone confessed to obscene practices, Nero forgave him all his other crimes.





 

—oOo—

La isla doble

La isla doble

Internews - Vendernos la moto globalista

 



EXCLUSIVE - BOUGHT AND PAID FOR: HOW $472 MILLION BUILT A GLOBAL LEFT-WING MEDIA MACHINE In February 2025, WikiLeaks pulled back the curtain on a government-funded media empire that’s been quietly shaping what billions of people read, watch, and believe. 
 
At the center of it all? A group you’ve probably never heard of: Internews Network. Funded mostly by USAID, Internews presents itself as a friendly nonprofit supporting “independent journalism.” But behind that noble-sounding mission lies a global operation that critics say is more about managing narratives than reporting facts. 
 
 The numbers are jaw-dropping. Nearly $473 million—yes, that’s nearly half a billion—has flowed to Internews from USAID and the U.S. State Department over the past 2 decades. Add in millions more from billionaire-backed organizations like George Soros’s Open Society, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and you’ve got a media Frankenstein stitched together with government cash and private influence. 
 
In 2023 alone, Internews claims to have worked with 4,291 media outlets, produced 4,799 hours of programming, and trained over 9,000 journalists. It also says it reached an audience of 778 million people worldwide. That’s more than double the population of the United States. But here’s where things get murky. Internews isn’t just giving media groups equipment and microphones. It’s tying grants to ideological conditions. 
 
In Hungary, for example, officials accused Internews of funding anti-government media under the guise of “media development.” If you didn’t toe the line, you didn’t get the money. In Ukraine, it funded 9 out of 10 major media outlets—almost all promoting pro-NATO, pro-conflict content during wartime. 
 
And it’s not just about news. In Kosovo, just months before major protests broke out in Serbia, Internews offered grants to reporters to write in Serbian. The pitch? Promote “positive” stories about Albanian-Serb relations. Sounds harmless—until you realize this was a foreign-funded push to shape how people talk about sensitive ethnic conflicts. 
 
 
Then there’s Internews’ Earth Journalism Network, which recently launched a $100,000 media grant focused on climate reporting in Asia. Sounds great—except that the fine print gives Internews and its donors the rights to edit and publish all the content. So yes, they’re funding journalism—but they’re also controlling the output. Even advertising isn’t off limits. Through its “Ads for News” program, Internews partners with GroupM, the world’s biggest media buyer, to funnel ad dollars to “trusted” outlets. If you’re not on the list, you get nothing. It’s a digital loyalty program—except instead of points, you get credibility and cash. 
 
Internews is led by Jeanne Bourgault, a former U.S. government official who made $451,000 last year. She previously worked on post-Soviet “transition programs” and oversaw a $250 million budget at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. In 2023, she launched a $10 million media fund at the Clinton Global Initiative—a project backed by Hillary Clinton. 
 
The Internews board includes big Democratic donors and political insiders, and WikiLeaks says at least one of its six subsidiaries is based in the Cayman Islands, a notorious offshore haven. Meanwhile, its headquarters in California? Reportedly an abandoned building still listed in official filings. Let that sink in: a half-billion-dollar media empire, pushing narratives in dozens of countries, funded by your tax dollars—and run from a ghost office. Internews says it’s here to “support press freedom.” But as one media analyst put it, “It’s not about giving journalists a voice—it’s about choosing which voices get heard.” 
 
So the next time you read a “fact-check” or see a story calling something “disinformation,” remember: it might just be brought to you by the same people who paid $473 million to decide what the world thinks is true. Sources: Anadolu Agency, Hungary Gov, Ukrayinska Pravda, KoSSev, Earth Journalism Network, TRT World, Concordia, Shore News Network

jueves, 24 de abril de 2025

Comunidad de vecinos

 

Comunidad de vecinos

The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy

10,000 

 

Artículo que puede leerse aquí:

Carlson, Tucker. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Transcription by J. A. García Landa. In García Landa, Vanity Fea 4 June 2021.*

         https://vanityfea.blogspot.com/2021/06/the-covid-worldwide-conspiracy.html     

         2021

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Transcribed by José Angel García Landa. Ibercampus (Vanity Fea) 6 June 2021.*

         https://www.ibercampus.eu/-the-covid-worldwide-conspiracy-5407.htm

         2021 DISCONTINUED 2021 (Censored by Ibercampus).

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson Interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Transcribed by José Angel García Landa. Academia 20 Dec. 2021.*

         https://www.academia.edu/65204390/

         2021

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson Interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Transcribed by José Angel García Landa. ResearchGate 25 Dec. 2021.*

         https://www.researchgate.net/publication/357328460

         2021

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson Interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Humanities Commons 30 Dec. 2021.*

         http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/85k6-dn60

         https://hcommons.org/deposits/item/hc:43765/

         2021

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson Interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Transcribed by J. A. García Landa. In García Landa, Vanity Fea  30 Dec. 2021.*

         https://vanityfea.blogspot.com/2021/12/the-covid-worldwide-conspiracy-tucker.html

         2021

_____. "The Covid Worldwide Conspiracy: Tucker Carlson Interviews Dr. Peter McCullough." Net Sight de José Angel García Landa 5 Jan. 2023.*

         https://personal.unizar.es/garciala/publicaciones/covidworldwide.html

https://personal.unizar.es/garciala/publicaciones/covidworldwide.pdf

         2023

Una tarde en Arcade

 

Una tarde en Arcade

Retropost, 2015: First We Take Manhattan (4)

 

Refoto

 

Refoto

Retropost, 2015: If You Could Read My Mind (2)

   

—Y, en efecto o en efectivo...

Snake Fighter 2

 

Snake Fighter 2

Loreena McKennitt - Santiago (Live 1994)

Refoto

 

Refoto

Retropost, 2015: El Ángel de la Historia

 

EL NUEVO ORDEN MUNDIAL de EEUU, CHINA y RUSIA ¿Y EUROPA?

domingo, 20 de abril de 2025

El tendedor

 

El tendedor

BEGOÑA GERPE CUENTA POR QUÉ HA HUIDO de ESPAÑA TRAS SER PERSEGUIDA JUDICIALMENTE

Un coche azul

 

Un coche azul

LAS REDES EXPLOTAN CONTRA ALONSO. NADIE CONOCE A SARA TURKESTANI.

Fotógrafa fotografiada

 

Fotógrafa fotografiada

La Lucha por la Sucesión en el Vaticano

A Green Thought

 

A Green Thought

Top Historian: How the Ukraine War is Going to End

En la ría de Vigo

En la ría de Vigo

 

SOBREPASA LOS LÍMITES TOLERABLES con @RubenGisbert

Heinrich Schütz - Il Primo Libro De Madrigali

En el río Verdugo

 

En el río Verdugo

La Función de la palabra - Mario Vargas Llosa

Looming

 

Looming

BREAKING NEWS: COVID-19 Lab-Leak Theory 'Cover-Up' Probed In Senate Homeland Security Committee

Refoto

Refoto

 

sábado, 19 de abril de 2025

I Shot JFK: The Shocking Truth

  

I Shot JFK  - JFK Assassin Final Interview Before His Death

Una entrevista totalmente creíble con James Earl Files (también conocido como James Sutton), uno de los tiradores que participaron en el organizadísimo asesinato del presidente John Fitzgerald Kennedy. Implica a la mafia y a la CIA, trabajando en colaboración estrecha y habitual, según han expuesto otros testigos y denunciantes. De ahí el interés continuado y persistente en el encubrimiento por parte de esta agencia criminal. Los principales directivos de la CIA que sobrevivan de esta etapa, incluyendo los que la han dirigido durante los últimos años, deberían ser cesados y juzgados por encubrimiento y traición, y la organización disuelta mejor que depurada. No llegará hasta ahí la cosa, ni muchísimo menos, por supuesto.

Véase también el testimonio de otra de las piezas de este complot, el delincuente/agente de la CIA Chauncey Marvin Holt, en Spooks, Hoods, and the Hidden Elite https://youtu.be/3z5MgCG4COY

Más de dos millones de visualizaciones y miles de comentarios que dejan claro el valor de este testimonio. Copio algunos de ellos tras la referencia:

 

I Shot JFK: The Shocking Truth. A Film by Wim Dankbaar and Kiviat Productions, Inc.  Prod., written and dir. Robert Kiviat. James Sutton a.k.a. James E. Files interviewed by Wim Dankbaar and Jim Marrs. Exec. Prod. Wim Dankbaar. Videography: Gary L. Beebe. Ed. Sean H. Fanton. USA: Bruder Releasing Inc., 2012, 2024. (Online video: "JFK Assassin Final Interview Before His Death".) YouTube (Documentary Central) 8 Dec. 2024.* (Joe West, James Sutton a.k.a. James E. Files, Zack Shelton, Charles Nicoletti, Johnny Roselli, Sam Giancana, CIA, Lee Harvey Oswald).

https://youtu.be/V_NughDXxf0

         2025

 

 ____

 

9564 comentarios

José Angel García Landa
Here's what happened to me. In the year 2000, I worked for an emergency door repair service in Memphis Tenn. One Sunday afternoon I got a page from my office to go to an address in a suburb of Memphis. I went there and a man opened the door, he was in his middle to late 60's , had silver hair and was really fit and tanned. He was well dressed and wore a gold rolex watch. He told me to follow him to the garage and he showed me the broken spring over the garage door and said, fix it, I don't care what it cost. He was one of those guys that would stand there and watch everything you did. When people did that, it made me nervous so I would always start small talk while I was working. I asked him what kind of work he did and he said that he was retired. I said, where did you retire from sir? He said, I retired from the FBI. I said, wow! That's interesting, thank you for your service, I always buttered them up because I didn't want them to freak out when I gave them the bill. He kinda loosened up after I said that and we started talking, after a few minutes I was going to make a joke. So I said, well since you worked for the FBI, maybe you can tell me something, he said, what's that? I said, who killed Kennedy? I was chuckling and was joking around and I thought he would say, Lee Harvey Oswald killed Kennedy. He looked me in the eye and said, Lyndon Johnson and Hoover had Kennedy killed. I was stunned into silence. I looked for him to say, gotcha! Or something like that but he was dead serious I went back to work and got thru and didn't say anything else. I started thinking, this guy is nuts! He's not an FBI agent, he's crazy. So I handed him the bill and he said, come into my office and I'll cut you a check. So I went there and I looked around and there was all kinds of FBI diplomas and pictures and even a picture of him with Lamar Alexander. I was flabbergasted. So I summoned up my courage and I said, sir,I just gotta ask you something. He stopped me and said, you don't believe it do you? He knew what I was going to say, I said well I have a hard time believing the vice president of the United States and the director of the FBI would kill the President. He said, do you have time for a cup of coffee? I said, I'll make time. We went into his breakfast nook and he made me a cup of sanka coffee and he talked about 45 minutes. I didn't interrupt him once. Well, this is getting long and my eyes hurt. But everything I just wrote down here is true. I will say that 17 years later I was living with my son and I started watching YouTube, one day I was looking for a video and saw a thumbnail that read something like, johnso, Hoover and Kennedy. I clicked on and it was a guy who had written a book and he was answering questions at a library somewhere and that guy said basically everything that FBI agent said to me 17 years before. The guy who wrote that book was Roger Stone. I had no idea who Roger stone was at the time. Well, that's my story. It's all true thanks for reading this
5,2 K
Remember when as kids we used to think only the evil Soviet Union did bad things and the USA was righteous? Such naive little kids we were.
2,8 K
The fact that the CIA is still covering up the assassination tells you how high the involvement was.
3,4 K
This is by far the most fascinating interview I have ever watched. Everything about this man is mind-blowing.
38
Who here in 2025 after President Trump authorized declassification of the JFK, RFK, & MLK files...??
1 K
If this man was not telling the truth, then IMO he deserved an Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role.
840
President Kennedy was hated by Lyndon Johnson, his vice president, by the Joints Chiefs of Staff, by the CIA (whom Kennedy had pledged to crush and scatter their dust to the four winds), and the Cosa Nostra. After the Cuban Missile Crisis, that was the last straw in their eyes. Between the Mafiosi and the Pentagon, I'm sure they decided he was a "clear and present danger" to the U.S. For me, it was the saddest day as a citizen of this country. If he would have lived, he was going to withdraw all 17,000 advisors in Vietnam. A lot died with John F. Kennedy. I'm 70 years old. I remember him.
1 K
When I was stationed at Bragg in the late 70s-80s, I was already a big JFK assassination hobbiest having attended a seminar at the UofSC on the subject in '78. At Bragg one night, after I had graduated from the old 82nd Sniper Course, I was having a few beers with one of the cadre I had gotten to know in the course ... and we got to talking about the JFK assassination. He told me that night (long before the Internet) that it was a Bragg trained shooter that was on the grassy knoll. He was adamant about it telling me that he had been told that by former (Vietnam era) cadre whom knew it through the grape vine for whatever reasons. I was always skeptical, until now. I just checked and, come to find out, James Earl Files (aka James Sutton) was a Bragg trained 82nd sniper school Vietnam era combat vet sniper grad. After watching the above video ... Files is not lying. Too many exact details, too many things said that make perfect craft sense in terms of a mission .... he's not lying. I have no doubts in my mind that this guy is the shooter. Also, with that said, the Fireball out of a Remington 700 also makes perfect sense.
15
I am from the same area as this man. He accurately named people , streets, towns and neighborhoods without pause and without a single error. He is not lying...
657
I'm from Dallas TX. When Kennedy was killed nobody believed that Lee Oswald was the assassin. All the places of business closed down immediately and my husband was sent home from work. I know the Mesquite TX area well. This man is telling the truth about the places he described. The motel, the area, Arlington TX, Fort Worth TX is nearby - everything. Jack Ruby was well known around town.
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