Time For a Sequel?

By Nathan Payne | pablosmoglives | 17 Aug 2021


One of the reasons I came to Mexico is burn-out.  As a musician, I've been living on the front lines of the socialist "give your work away for free" movement for nearly 20 years.  I sympathize with everyone who's lost their livelihood since the Freedom Flu struck, but the line ends back there, around the time everybody thought Metallica was "whining" because they could see what Napster was going to lead to.  I know you weren't paying attention to the Musicians in the Coal Mine, slaving away for tips in oblivion, but please don't cut.  You got the culture that you paid for.  If you thought Metallica was whining during the Napster fiasco, don't whine about losing your livelihood.  Not to anybody who can play or sing.

One of the things I'm burned-out on is people blaming Muslims for 9/11.  The government conspiracy theory we're all supposed to unthinkingly believe has become a remarkably default, mainstream opinion, even among people you'd think would question it.  Or who have questioned it in the past, but haven't brought it up in oh I dunno, over 10 years?  I'm not going to get into the myriad reasons why every critically-thinking, sentient being above the age of 12 should have serious doubts about Muslims being the perpetrators of 9/11, but if you actually believe the mainstream line, you have traded your heart, mind, and soul for intellectual (and probably spiritual) heroin.  You're like a junkie.

Suffice it to say, 9/11 was an inside job.

I left the U.S. 2 weeks before the election, and am not going to get into the obvious problems with Joe Biden.  I wasn't waiting around to see who won the election.  Trump won, of course, but it didn't matter, did it?  I didn't think it would (though I didn't foresee the brazen, obvious theft), and left beforehand, so I could find a lifeboat before most people started looking for them.

I've disengaged from much of what's going on up in the U.S., not entirely willfully.  It makes me sad.  But I'm burned out.  I don't actually know if leaving Afghanistan is a good or bad idea.  I marched with 100,000 people in L.A. in March of 2003 to protest the invasion of Iraq, and was a Ron Paul guy in 2012, so I'm not inclined to think GOING TO AFGHANISTAN AT ALL was ever a good idea, but if you think it was, and/or that leaving it now is a bad idea, I'm not going to argue with you.  You may be right.

The point of this article is to suggest to those of you who haven't dropped the ball and picked up the intellectual dope needle over the last 20 years, pulling out of Afghanistan and handing it to the Taliban seems like a marvelous opportunity for the control-freak elite to engage in another 9/11-style false flag and blame it on the Muslims.

Is it time for a sequel?

I seriously hope not, but if another large-scale attack occurs on Western soil, something involving fires that can melt steel while leaving the passports of the "terrorists" intact, 

if they blame Muslim extremism, especially in an age in which actual Jihad is blamed on "whiteness" and "systemic racism," you know it was anything but Muslim extremism.

Just a thought.

 

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Nathan Payne
Nathan Payne

I am a songwriter and bandleader who travels the world in search of the golden ticket. http://www.pablosmoglives.com


pablosmoglives
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