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Read or Condemn Yourself to Death by Ignorance

For those courageous souls brave enough to look and see what is,

who are unwilling to blindly accept

the lies and rules of tyrannical authority.


Wednesday 10th June 2020


G’day,

Hope this finds you fit and well.

I started this newsletter in October 2006 when I just had my software business. 20 months later I started Healthelicious Foods, initially to satisfy the urge to provide a more nutritious energy bar for my daughter. I have barely mentioned it here since then but with all the hoopla about the Coronavirus it would be remiss of me not to bring to your attention the fact that I have a nutrition powder specifically formulated to provide superior nourishment for your body’s immune functions. Check it out at https://www.healthelicious.com.au/Nutri-Blast-Immune-Blend.html and if you have any questions, drop me a line.

Here is a sampling of what crossed my digital desk over the last week.

Wrong Source In Ad

Naomi Seibt Faces Prison For Incorrect Climate Views

Feminism Definition

What Did Ancient Rome Look Like? - Cinematic Animation

2020 WTF

Marked Safe

Join the Call for a Moratorium on the Invasion and Destruction of Amazonian Indigenous Lands!

12 Socialising But !00 Protesters?

Archbishop Viganò’s powerful letter to President Trump: Eternal struggle between good and evil playing out right now

Honest Government Ad | Economic Recovery

Stupdity vs Intelligence

It Was Never About The Virus

The man who wrote the most perfect sentences ever written

I Love You

I hope you get something from it!

Cheers!

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wrong Source In Ad
 
CBA Ad
 
 
 

I saw this CBA ad on LinkedIn.

That is misstated. It is not the impact of coronavirus. It is the impact of insane restrictions on their consituents by a misinformed government that did not take the trouble to debung the fake news emanating from the MSM reporting in Fear Porn level 10 on dramatisations resulting from Neil Ferguson at the Bill Gates funded Imperial College using his “gets it wrong every time” modelling software that forecast wildly exaggerated death rates.

Similar to the agenda driven Imperial College’s lies about Global Warming.

Junk science. Don’t live with lies. Stop agreeing with it. Stop buying it. Stop forwarding and promoting it. Seek the truth and promote it.

 
 
 
 
Naomi Seibt Faces Prison For Incorrect Climate Views
 
Naomi Sebt
 
 
 

(Tom: This is oh so wrong for many reasons! It is a human right to express an opinion (Human Rights Articles 18 an 19), the suppression of which is the tool of dictators, tyrants, liars and criminals all of whom are cowards and cannot face being challenged. So they should be!)

“We do not believe any group of men adequate enough or wise enough to operate without scrutiny or without criticism. We know that the only way to avoid error is to detect it, that the only way to detect it is to be free to inquire. We know that in secrecy error undetected will flourish and subvert”. – J Robert Oppenheimer.

Naomi Seibt, the 19 year old from Germany who has been making a name as the anti-Greta lately. Her common sense messages about global warming have not gone down well with the climate establishment, who prefer the hysterical outpourings of Greta.

But the campaign against her took a disturbing turn last month. She faces jail time for her YouTube posts. Read more of her story here:

 
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Feminism Definition
 
Feminism Definition
 
 
 

“Did you know that women's lib was founded by the Rockefellers?

 
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What Did Ancient Rome Look Like? - Cinematic Animation
 
Ancient Rome Recreation
 
 
 

An interesting cinematic recreation.

 
Button
 
 
 
2020 WTF
 
2020 WTF
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Marked Safe
 
Marked Safe
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Join the Call for a Moratorium on the Invasion and Destruction of Amazonian Indigenous Lands!
 
join the call for a moratorium
 
 
 

I signed. Love you to join me in helping these people.

Our “culture” is supposed to be “more advanced” yet ours hurts theirs.

I don’t see that as being more advanced.

Technologically maybe so, but far less humane.

 
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12 Socialising But !00 Protesters?
 
12 Socialising But !00 Protesters?
 
 
 

If you were looking for logic and science, give media, government and medicine on this planet a wide berth! The illogic just beggars belief!

This is nothing but a covert attack on religion.

 
 
 
 
Archbishop Viganò’s powerful letter to President Trump: Eternal struggle between good and evil playing out right now
 
Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano
 
 
 

Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò warns the president that the current crises over the coronavirus pandemic and the George Floyd riots are a part of the eternal spiritual struggle between the forces of good and evil.

 
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Honest Government Ad | Economic Recovery
 
Honest Ad
 
 
 

Not 100% acccurate but the major thrust is spot on the money.

 
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Stupdity vs Intelligence
 
Stupdity vs Intelligence
 
 
 

It is also Criminality versus Creativity. When you rehabilitate in a person the ability to create you automatically extinguish criminality.

 
 
 
 
It Was Never About The Virus
 
It Was Never About The Virus
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
The man who wrote the most perfect sentences ever written
 
P G Wodehouse
 
 
 

Brilliant! Loved it. Brought back fond memories of a youth spent more reading such (and Biggles) than doing homework.

By Nicholas Barber 2nd June 2020

(Tom: Brilliant! Loved it. Brought back fond memories of a youth spent more reading such (and Biggles) than doing homework.)

In our latest essay in which a critic reflects on a cultural work that brings them joy, Nicholas Barber pays tribute to the blissfully escapist comic novels of PG Wodehouse.

If we’re talking about culture that makes people happy, we have to start with the works of PG Wodehouse. There are two reasons why. One reason is that making people happy was Wodehouse’s overriding ambition. The other reason is that he was better at it than any other writer in history.

Some authors may want to expose the world’s injustices, or elevate us with their psychological insights. Wodehouse, in his words, preferred to spread “sweetness and light”. Just look at those titles: Nothing Serious, Laughing Gas, Joy in the Morning. With every sparkling joke, every well-meaning and innocent character, every farcical tussle with angry swans and pet Pekingese, every utopian description of a stroll around the grounds of a pal’s stately home or a flutter on the choir boys’ hundred yards handicap at a summer village fete, he wanted to whisk us far away from our worries. Writing about being a humourist in his autobiography Over Seventy, Wodehouse quoted two people in the Talmud who had earnt their place in Heaven: “We are merrymakers. When we see a person who is downhearted, we cheer him up.”

As P G Wodehouse himself said, his primary aim was to spread “sweetness and light” (Credit: Alamy)

My own introduction to this supreme merrymaker came via Jeeves and Wooster, the television series adapted from some of his most beloved stories about a young toff and his unflappable manservant. Hugh Laurie starred as Bertie Wooster, the moneyed bachelor who seemed to care about nothing except food, drink and fashionable socks, but who always came to the aid of the numerous old schoolmates who were even more stupid than he was. Stephen Fry co-starred as Jeeves, who had the brains that his young master lacked. As an undernourished, overworked student, stressed by essays and exams, I was always relieved when I could nip down to the college’s TV room (yes, it was a long time ago) for my weekly escape into a jazz-age wonderland of art-deco flats and panelled gentlemen’s clubs, “tissue-restoring” cocktails and buffet breakfasts served on silver platters.

A crafter of perfect sentences
Nearly three decades on, I’m currently rewatching the DVDs with my daughter, and Jeeves and Wooster is still pretty much flawless. When I interviewed Laurie in 2000, I gushed about the series, and he cited what was, at the time, his favourite Wodehouse line: “The drowsy stillness of the afternoon was shattered by what sounded to his strained senses like GK Chesterton falling on a sheet of tin.”

There are so many other lines he could have gone for. How about this one?
“It is never difficult to distinguish between a Scotsman with a grievance and a ray of sunshine.”

Or this?
“It isn’t often that Aunt Dahlia lets her angry passions rise, but when she does, strong men climb trees and pull them up after them.”

Or this?
“Like so many substantial citizens of America, he had married young and kept on marrying, springing from blonde to blonde like the chamois of the Alps leaping from crag to crag.”

The one that has me chuckling to myself on a regular basis is this Bertie Wooster gem from the novel Right Ho, Jeeves: “’Very good,” I said coldly. ’In that case, tinkerty tonk.’ And I meant it to sting.”

We could keep listing zingers like that all day: there were 96 Wodehouse books published in his lifetime, and he was drafting another when he died in 1975 at the age of 93. What these excerpts prove is that, however much we may cherish the bumbling aristocratic characters and their convoluted escapades, what really makes Wodehouse so addictive is the prose: the phrases which appear to float along so effortlessly, but which came about because he would, he said, “write every sentence 10 times”.  

He is the greatest musician of the English language, and exploring variations of familiar material is what musicians do all day – Douglas Adams

To read any of those sentences is to marvel at the elaborate but elegant route it takes to a perfect punchline; to delight in how it glides between Shakespeare and race-track slang, between understatement and exaggeration, between gentle humour and stinging wit. “What Wodehouse writes is pure word music,” said Douglas Adams, the author of The Hitchhikers’ Guide to the Galaxy. “It matters not one whit that he writes endless variations on a theme of pig kidnappings, lofty butlers, and ludicrous impostures. He is the greatest musician of the English language, and exploring variations of familiar material is what musicians do all day.”

He could certainly have written darker, more soul-searching books if he hadn’t been so naturally jovial: he had plenty of raw material to draw on. Pelham Grenville Wodehouse was born in 1881. (Perhaps he was thinking of his own names when he had Bertie commenting that “there’s some raw work pulled at the font from time to time”.) His Victorian colonial parents were rarely in the same country as he was, according to his biographer, Robert McCrum. “In total, Wodehouse saw his parents for barely six months between the ages of three and 15, which is by any standards a shattering emotional deprivation,” he noted in 2005’s Wodehouse: A Life. Nonetheless, “Plum” relished his Dulwich College schooldays, and was looking forward to his university years when the next blow fell: his father announced that he had to go straight to a job in a bank instead.

There were 96 Wodehouse books published in his lifetime, with his Jeeves and Wooster novels remaining his most celebrated legacy (Credit: Alamy)

The disappointment didn’t stop him. He always knew that he wanted to be a writer, and so he sold short stories at a superhuman rate until he could make a living from them. Soon he graduated to anthologies and novels, some featuring Jeeves and Wooster (who debuted in 1915), others featuring the canny Psmith or the garrulous Mr Mulliner, some set at mossy Blandings Castle, others set at Marvis Bay Golf and Country Club. Beyond these, there were Broadway musicals and Hollywood screenplays, and a long and harmonious marriage. (He made the money and his wife spent it, an arrangement which suited them both.)

But while his professional and personal lives were blessed, they included episodes which could have been turned into sombre literature. During World War Two, his adored stepdaughter Leonora died unexpectedly, aged 40, after a minor operation, and Wodehouse himself was arrested in northern France, where he was living at the time, and sent to a German internment camp for almost a year. Even there, he kept writing, and polished off a novel in captivity, the appropriately titled Money in the Bank. He was then moved to a hotel in Berlin, where he was invited by German radio to broadcast a series of comic accounts of his internment. Naively, he agreed, keen as he was to assure his fans that he was in good health and good spirits. What he didn’t realise was that he was playing into the hands of the Nazi government, which could claim to be treating its illustrious guest well. In Britain, he was accused of colluding with the enemy, and his reputation never quite recovered, but there was hardly a trace of anger or self-recrimination in his work. He stuck to prelapsarian yarns in which everyone was essentially comfortable and fortunate – except, of course, when they found themselves briefly engaged to a woman who believed in healthy eating and gainful employment.

Whatever was going on in his life, Wodehouse stayed buoyant; and whatever is going on in the reader’s life, he keeps us buoyant, too. “I was clinically depressed for most of 1999,” said Jay McInerney, the author of Bright Lights, Big City in a 2016 interview “and I would turn to Wodehouse, possibly the funniest writer in the English language. It seemed to be more effective at warding off despair than the antidepressants that I was taking.”

Despite his gaiety, Wodehouse endured a number of dark chapters, including the unexpected death of his much-loved stepdaughter Leonora aged 40 (Credit: Alamy)

Maybe you can spot some deeper themes in his books if you look hard enough. At times I can persuade myself that there is something subversive in Bertie’s lack of interest in the conventional status markers of a career and a marriage, and something instructive in his insistence on helping his lovestruck friends, however ungrateful they may be. I can even argue that Wodehouse was revolutionary because his characters didn’t defeat villains in fist fights or shootouts (although they sometimes stole policemen’s helmets on Boat Race night). Perhaps he was teaching us that we can’t all be high achievers, let alone rugged action heroes, but that we can all be kind and generous. In other words, we can live according to the code of the Woosters. But I admit that this is a stretch. As Stephen Fry put it, “You don’t analyse such sunlit perfection: you just bask in its warmth and splendour.”

Evelyn Waugh might have agreed. “Mr. Wodehouse’s idyllic world can never stale,” he said in 1961. “He will continue to release future generations from captivity that may be more irksome than our own.” Captivity doesn’t get much more irksome than the one we’re enduring now, but Wodehouse can still release us from it.

 
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I Love You
 
François Clemmons and Fred Rogers
 
 
 

In August, 1968, the country was still reeling from the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. four months earlier, and the race riots that followed on its heels. Nightly news showed burning cities, radicals and reactionaries snarling at each other across the cultural divide.

I Love You

In August, 1968, the country was still reeling from the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. four months earlier, and the race riots that followed on its heels. Nightly news showed burning cities, radicals and reactionaries snarling at each other across the cultural divide.

A brand new children’s show out of Pittsburgh, which had gone national the previous year, took a different approach. Fred Rogers had met François Clemmons at a church service after hearing him sing, and asked him to join the show. Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood introduced Officer Clemmons, a black police officer who was a kindly, responsible authority figure, kept his neighborhood safe, and was Mr. Roger’s equal, colleague and neighbor.

A year later in 1969 when black Americans were still prevented from swimming alongside whites, Mr. Rogers invited Officer Clemmons to join him and cool his feet in a plastic wading pool, breaking a well-known color barrier. And there they were, brown feet and white feet, side by side in the water, silently, contemplatively, without comment. The episode culminated with Rogers drying off Clemmons’ feet. Most young kids were probably unaware of the real weight the episode carried, its scriptural overtones, but the image of a white man tending to the needs of a black man was seared in their minds nonetheless.

25 years later, when François Clemmons retired, his last scene on the show revisited that same wading pool, this time reminiscing. Officer Clemmons asked Mr. Rogers what he’d been thinking during their silent interlude a quarter century before. Fred Rogers’ answer was that he’d been thinking of the many ways people say “I love you.”

Carl Aveni

In a world screaming out for tolerance, acceptance, kindness, and love - choose to be a Fred Rogers - because if more people could find a way to love others the way he did, without barriers, this world would be a much better place...

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Until next time,
dream big dreams,
plan out how to achieve them,
be continually executing your plans,
enlist people to your causes,
travel and/or read widely, preferably both,
all the while observing what you observe
rather than thinking what you are told to think,
think well of your fellow man,
take time to help your fellow man,
he sorely needs it and it will help you too,
eat food that is good for your body,
exercise your body,
take time to destress,
and do the important things
that make a difference -
they are rarely the urgent ones!

Tom

 
 

Most of the content herein has been copied from someone else. Especially the images. My goodness some people are talented at creating aesthetics! The small bits that are of my creation are Copyright 2014-2020 © by Tom Grimshaw - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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