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People in Marrakech are noticing a shift. It’s not magic; it’s Human Capital Reshuffling. While the streets are being "cleared," external funding (EU) is simultaneously formalizing these flows into industrial training (heavy machinery). The paradox? We are professionalizing a foreign workforce for our industries while our own local unemployment...

51,240 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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I think a big mistake is believing that if something is here, we should be able to see it. Right? The lights in the sky and the pilots or the gods or whatever they are? I think we assume out of arrogance and ego. An insect can crawl across your hand and never understand that you are a whole entire being. It only experiences pressure, heat, vibration, and movement. A fingertip appears. A shadow passes. The insect never sees the body attached to it. The insect does not have access to the full image. Ever. I think our situation may be exactly the same. Whatever people call the phenomenon, nonhuman intelligence, gods, or something else entirely, may be present in full while we only register a portion of it. We notice effects, not the actual being. Changes in perception. Anomalies. We expect a face when all we are capable of sensing is the fingertip. Let me explain. Reports are always partial and strange. Lights, shapes, impressions, symbols, missing time, pressure, fear, calm. None of it ever shows us a full being, or the real craft; because our senses are not built to assemble it. Just like the ant cannot assemble a human from a few sensations. Now that doesn't mean what we are seeing is fake. It means the insect’s world is smaller than the thing interacting with it. I get sick of people saying there is no there there, I think they are making the same mistake the insect would make. Our reality is likely a thin slice of what actually exists. We move through a world full of forces and intelligences that exceed our resolution. We are not seeing nothing. We are seeing effects. And effects are often the only honest proof a limited observer ever gets.

Jason Wilde

12,125 görüntüleme • 5 ay önce

Paramedics rushing a stretcher through Hounslow High Street in the middle of the afternoon. Another stabbing, cut down on what used to be ordinary English ground. In the footage, a group of black youths are shouting aggressively at the victim on the stretcher, while police detain someone nearby. This is the soundtrack of modern west London: imported aggression layered over our streets. I grew up in Feltham and Isleworth, used to knock about in Hounslow all the time, I’ve watched the place turn into an absolute cess pit of third world filth. Fast-forward to now: the place is barely recognisable. The native English population has been diluted to near-invisibility. The few remaining whites are often Eastern European, Polish, Albanian, Baltic imports who arrived later and clustered in their own enclaves. The dominant presence is from further afield: Africa, the Caribbean, the subcontinent, the Middle East. With them came the predictable pathologies, knife crime epidemics, gang rivalries, street-level intimidation. Scenes like this one, with bystanders shouting over a bleeding body and police making arrests, are no longer anomalies; they’re routine. This is not diversity. It is demographic conquest by stealth, enabled by successive governments that prioritised mass immigration over the preservation of our national character. Politicians. Labour and Conservative alike, opened the floodgates for cheap labour, electoral advantage, and ideological dogma, while dismissing warnings about cultural incompatibility as ‘racism’. The result? Our towns hollowed out, our young people stabbed in places their grandparents walked safely, our social fabric shredded. Every such incident is a direct indictment of open borders and the refusal to enforce integration or deport those who bring violence. We owe nothing to the world beyond our shores; our first duty is to the native people of these islands. those whose ancestors built this country through centuries of toil, law, and sacrifice. If you remember what Hounslow, or any of our towns, used to be, and you’re sick of watching it die, say it plainly. The time for polite silence is over, people need to hear the truth.

Lewis.B.Rendell Official

51,444 görüntüleme • 3 ay önce