19-11-2009, 09:10 AM
Today, for the first time (and I'm usually pretty religious about scanning the 'net on a regular basis), up pops a story -- already reverberating through the 'Net -- that I'd never heard before and whiich is based on an old "Unsolved Mysteries" TV show (and reported within the same circle of places as the Moshe thing?) about a rainfall of gelatinous substance in small town ... 'In 1994, over a two-week period in August, gelatinous substance reportedly fell' on Oakville, Washington.'
WikiPedia (in a section labeled 'factually disputed') has this:
"In 1994, over a two-week period in August, gelatinous substance reportedly fell from the sky six times. The mysterious goo allegedly contained white blood cells and several acids from the human stomach, and was reported to infect anyone it touched with symptoms of exhaustion, breathing problems, heavy perspiration, fainting, and other flu-like symptoms.[citation needed] Several animals in the area are reported to have perished because of this. [1]
[URL="http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword05m.htm"]
[/URL]
The whole story was published in a 1995 episode of Unsolved Mysteries.[2] The mystery was later termed "acid rain" by authorities, although some believe it was evidence of chem trails.[citation needed]
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The point here is not to present the story but to postulate, based on the above and a general aura surrounding recent events, as well as what we seem to know about 'alternate reality games', simulation derived from NSA analysis of popular communications, etc., if a new wave and technique of pre-scripted propaganda/disinformation has been created.
By extension, then, if we can identify styles, techniques, outlet sources (blogs, news aggregator sites, et al), and compare that with known past techniques (as well as observe subtle future shifts and timing) -- intuitively and without turning it into a "Federal project" -- then we can perhaps inoculate ourselves (and others) against its effects and more quickly identify it when it re-occurs.
Maybe it is only my own awareness but pattern recognition et al can sharpen out game and weaken theirs.
WikiPedia (in a section labeled 'factually disputed') has this:
"In 1994, over a two-week period in August, gelatinous substance reportedly fell from the sky six times. The mysterious goo allegedly contained white blood cells and several acids from the human stomach, and was reported to infect anyone it touched with symptoms of exhaustion, breathing problems, heavy perspiration, fainting, and other flu-like symptoms.[citation needed] Several animals in the area are reported to have perished because of this. [1]
[URL="http://www.zetatalk.com/theword/tword05m.htm"]
[/URL]
The whole story was published in a 1995 episode of Unsolved Mysteries.[2] The mystery was later termed "acid rain" by authorities, although some believe it was evidence of chem trails.[citation needed]
####
The point here is not to present the story but to postulate, based on the above and a general aura surrounding recent events, as well as what we seem to know about 'alternate reality games', simulation derived from NSA analysis of popular communications, etc., if a new wave and technique of pre-scripted propaganda/disinformation has been created.
By extension, then, if we can identify styles, techniques, outlet sources (blogs, news aggregator sites, et al), and compare that with known past techniques (as well as observe subtle future shifts and timing) -- intuitively and without turning it into a "Federal project" -- then we can perhaps inoculate ourselves (and others) against its effects and more quickly identify it when it re-occurs.
Maybe it is only my own awareness but pattern recognition et al can sharpen out game and weaken theirs.
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"