And Always
January 31, 2012

January in review
January 31, 2012
Looking back on the ideas and information that fluttered across my desk this month and moved me to write, the impression that still lingers is AGENDA. Onward.
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Surrounded
January 30, 2012
I think the following graphic is worth a thousand words. Here are a few facts to consider when viewing it:
- Like other targeted countries, it possesses real wealth, i.e., natural resources, precious metals and antiquities
- Its leader is egregiously misquoted in the mainstream media in order to keep people misinformed
- Its people are among the most highly educated in the world
- It continues to resist the vampires at the IMF and World Bank (like Libya and Iraq did and we know what happened to them)
Not one person in a thousand correctly apprehends what’s been going on and is about to go on in the big sand box over there.
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Most hated companies
January 29, 2012
Just a few comments to the full article, which is linked, following the post.
- Facebook, the data aggregator of the planet, is in first position. Their biggest offenses had to do, naturally, with disrespecting the privacy of their users, which has now fallen from nearly a billion to less than 800 million. Many of their new services are mandatory instead of voluntary. I think their most egregious misstep is the mapping of each user’s face with their facial recognition technology. Thinking about why they would do such a thing leads to a very dark place.
- AT&T gets “poor” rankings from over a quarter of their users. Unfortunately those customers are locked in with contracts, so despite their dissatisfaction, they can’t go elsewhere without a sizable financial penalty. Both the feds and the press have jumped on the “I hate AT&T” bandwagon with their own criticisms.
- Goldman Sachs has committed so much fraud, its continued existence is only more evidence of the complete depravity of the current economic system. If an individual engaged in the equivalent of what’s been documented against this monster, they would have been thrown in jail and their assets seized. The only good thing about this den of thieves is that when the system self destructs, their fall will be great.
- Johnson & Johnson spends a lot of money to impress consumers with the idea that since it is “a family company” it cares about all things familial. Ha. They’ve gotten a lot of bad press for the tsunami of recalls they’ve had to announce, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Like Henry Ford, I’m sure old man Johnson would be rolling over in his grave if he knew what his progeny has done to his vision and his company.
I have one question about this article: where is Monsanto?
http://247wallst.com/2012/01/13/the-10-most-hated-companies-in-america/2/
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Thinking
January 28, 2012
Like writing letters, thinking is a dying art. Although it proffers incalculable joy and reward, it seems to be beyond many these days. And, thinking is the antidote to stupidity.
People who have unwittingly let themselves be victimized by the unseen social engineers have largely fallen to two fates:
- they have been dumbed down to the point that they can no longer think
- they have been swept into the “I’m too busy” hive mind and do not think
Whether you cannot think or do not think, the price you pay is the same: a drab life of dictated values, arrested growth and missed opportunities.
Thinking takes time and discipline. It is supported by the ability to be alone with one’s self, to concentrate, to search and to receive.
A relaxed mind is a creative mind. The evidence suggests an agenda behind all this. The paucity of creativity coming out of the now seven billion people on this planet speaks for itself.
A mind is a terrible thing to waste.
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
The education system
January 27, 2012
I spent nearly 20 years in this system and have now spent another 20 years educating myself for real. One of the core life lessons from personal experience with a psychopath, which is what this blog is all about, is the fine art of manipulating information.
The world's greatest computer
The controllers of the systems in place today are masters of the art and science of manipulating information. Their ploys include emotionalizing information, gaslighting, editing information, rewriting history, withholding information, mocking anything that doesn’t further their agenda, information blackouts or blocking and more.
Parents and children enrolled in the public education system must be unaware of what they’re doing to themselves, otherwise, they would exit the system. George Carlin’s observation about public education in one of his last performances says it all, “They don’t want a population capable of critical thinking … they want obedient workers.” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jQT7_rVxAE
The public education system from pre-school to post-graduate does not teach students how to think, rather it teaches them what to think. It crushes anything beautiful or creative that appears while the student is in its maw.
One of the ways it gets away with this ultimate thought crime is by promoting the perverse and preposterous to give the unthinking the impression of liberality and advancement. Nothing could be further from the truth. The passage of time proves the lie.
One of many change agents
The few geniuses of the 20th century were not products of the educational system. As you go farther back in history, what you’ll see is that as the public education system was being put into place, the contributions to art, literature, philosophy and technology declined. Things speak for themselves.
It goes without saying that this is not a rant against learning, it’s a red flag that the current educational system is the antithesis of learning and there’s a very sick agenda behind at work behind that system.
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Wolves!
January 26, 2012
I offer this post as a non-hunter and non-rancher.
Controversies can be extremely educational for those of us who really want to understand the heart of the matter. Wolves have been at the center of controversy off and on for hundreds of years in several continents.
Today, wolves are up again. They represent one of many polarizing topics being discussed at high and low levels. Wolves most impact the lives of those who live closest to them. The voices of those people are often drowned out by wolf advocates who live in places where there are no wolves.
If I wanted to learn about rice paddy farming, I would want to talk with rice paddy farmers and people who lived next to rice paddy farming. Same thing with wolves.
A child of the suburbs, large predators did not figure in my daily life. In my mid-twenties I read Barry Lopez’ OF WOLVES AND MEN. I began to fall under the spell of Lopez’ sympathetic writing and canis lupus.
I proceeded to read just about every wolf book I could get my hands on. A few years later, living in Washington state, I volunteered as a docent at a wolf sanctuary and learned more from one-on-one interaction over time with some of the wolves there.
Fast forward to 2006 and a move to Wyoming. That is when my thinking about wolves began to change. I resisted what I heard with what I’d read, but soon learned that there was indeed another side to the story. Eye-witness accounts of surplus kills were many. These contradicted everything I’d learned previously, which was that wolves reproduced according to available food and never killed for sport.
Six years on, now, I’ve heard enough and seen enough to accept the sickening fact that for whatever reason, the wolves here in the northern Rockies are killing for reasons other than survival. I have no explanation for this, but the evidence convinces me.
At many recorded kills no part of the prey was eaten.
Confirmed wolf kill of whitetail deer. Completely uneaten.At other recorded kills only a small portion of the prey were eaten.
Confirmed wolf kill of mule deer. Only hearts of fetuses eaten.In 1985, the bill-paying public was told that the gray wolf (canis lupus) needed to be “re-introduced” to Yellowstone in the interest of the “balance of nature”. What the public wasn’t told was that the Canadian timber wolf (canis lupus occidentalis) was going to be brought down to Yellowstone. Though both are in the same genus, their species have some differences.
Wikipedia allows that the largest documented wolves killed by man weighed 175 (Alaska) and 190 (Ukraine) pounds. The gray wolves that used to run in Yellowstone are stated by USGF to have been in the 50 to 100 pound range, females five to 10 percent smaller than males. Individuals over 110 pounds are described as extremely rare.
Here are a couple of photos attributed to be of Canadian timber wolves shown with their hunter for scale.
This hunter is 6’3″, wolf was 7’7″ nose to tail. Subjects’ heights unspecified, both appear average sized.For antelope, deer, elk, bison and moose (as well as coyote and fox) in Yellowstone and the greater Rocky Mountain region, the consequences of the introduction of the Canadian timber wolf have been severe. In 2011, non-resident hunters boycotted Idaho over its mismanagement which has resulted in the largest wolf population and smallest ungulate population in the lower 48. Supposedly, nearly 6,000 hunting licenses for ungulates (at 900.00 each) remained unsold at the end of the season, December 15.
The makers of the “Yellowstone is Dead” video say that the agenda behind the wolf debacle in the norther Rockies is driving more people off the land. Some 30-50 thousand people still work as ranchers and outfitters in this five-state region.
What shall we do?
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Noxious weeds
January 25, 2012
Noxious weeds are one thing. Those not native to the areas in which they’ve sprouted are something else entirely. One has become a serious form of biowarfare. It showed up in Nepal in 1975 and has now destroyed hundreds of square miles.
Under double threat: poaching and banmara
The green intruder from South America is known as “banmara” and is classified as a parasitical weed, in other words, it’s a forest killer. It grows about an inch a day and produces upwards of 40,000 seeds a day.
At this rate, researchers project that half the habitat of the affected regions will be totally wiped out. When vegetation is killed, so is wildlife. This part of Nepal is home to Chitwan National Park and the rare one-horned rhino and royal begal tiger, both of which have been almost decimated by poaching.
This weed invasion did not happen without human action. Its final result may be beyond human remedy.
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976
Electrical pollution
January 23, 2012
We were all told that the rush to force fluorescent light bulb use on us was to save natural resources. Well, let’s take a look at what this mandate really entails.
Europeans have known about the risks of fluorescent lights for a long time. They’ve known about electrical pollution, too. The risks are beyond our ability to sense them; that is, we can’t see, hear, smell, taste or feel them, but we can be sickened and die from them. Ahhhhh. That’s a dot and we’re going to connect it in a minute.
I learned about electrical pollution from a good friend who is Swiss. In the aftermath of losing three foal embryos in the first trimester, I learned that one of the causes could have been electrical pollution emitted by small power poles within a quarter mile of my farm. (The other cause could have been the much vaunted West Nile vaccine, but that’s another post.)
My Swiss friend told me how in Europe, pregnant women in the workplace are not allowed in rooms with electrical equipment or fluorescent light bulbs. This had been standard practice for as long as she can remember. Electrical pollution affects animals, too. (See vid below.)
Perhaps the Europeans are more up to speed on this because they have lived in so much closer proximity to each other for so long. The population density of Europe is an average of 134 people per square mile. In the United States, the average population density is 70 people per square mile. In Canada, it’s nine. In Monaco, it’s 4,300.
Here’s what fluorescent bulbs emit when turned on:
- Phenol–a mildly acidic and toxic white crystal, obtained from coal tar (used in chemical manufacturing).
- Naphthalene–a volatile white crystalline compound, obtained from coal tar distillation (used in mothballs).
- Styrene–a liquid hydrocarbon, obtained from petroleum processing (used in plastics manufacturing).
- Mercury vapor–a heavy metal gas, obtained from liquid mercury (used in many industries).
These substances are all known carcinogens. When fluorescent bulbs are broken, mercury is released and room evacuation for at least 15 minutes is recommended. Mercury poisoning takes many forms; it can lead to irreversible damage and death.
- Blood morphology
- Brain function
- Skin health
- Stress behaviors
- Muscle strength
Anna Moss
www.relationshipredflags.com
www.comingbackbetter.com
www.abuseinmarriage.com
Content copyright (c) Anna Moss ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Image copyright retained by originator. Image shared for educational purposes as allowed by Section 107, US Copyright Act 1976



















