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Glad to be among the rank heretics!

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It's a very exclusive club 😆.

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May 13, 2023Liked by Robyn Chuter

Forget science, all must bow and kiss the ring of vaxism, amen. Thanks again for another great post Robyn!

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Vaxism - that's a great name for it!

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Great take down. Here in Central Victoria Aus I feel to this day I walk amongst cult members. No one will talk or discuss but they will give you strange looks if you say the transfection agent doesn't stop transmission.

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May 28, 2023·edited May 28, 2023Author

Oof. That's got to be tough. In rural Queensland, where I've lived for the past year and a half, there's a small hard core of Branch Covidians (mostly professionals and employees), but most of the tradesmen and small business owners are wide awake and only too willing to talk about the sheer insanity of the past 3 years. There are, sadly, also many jab-injured people, and they're under no illusions about what caused their injuries.

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I’m from Queensland and my relatives and family are there. I’ve wanted to move back but after 30 years wife 2 kids etc I’m stuck in Portlandia for now.

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Sorry to hear that.

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May 22, 2023Liked by Robyn Chuter

Actually it is formulated by the very organization that formulated the inquisition and it’s goal is the same - total control. Personally I believe it is a religion behind all of this social engineering. In several old historical sources such as ‘The great controversy’ by eg white c1888, there are definite religious overtones.

I have a masters in library ‘science’ and I agree totally with your assessment of social sciences. I always though it weird to call it library science.

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I've come to agree with you that there is a religion behind the social engineering, and that it's ancient. I'm interested in your thoughts on the Inquisition and who was behind it, as I've come across several different theses.

I must confess I had never heard of 'library science' until I stumbled across that quote. It made me laugh out loud. I understand that there's a lot more to running libraries than most people think, but 'science'????? It reminds me of a hilarious event that occurred when I was in high school, and the 'experts' in charge of setting the curriculum decided to rename the classes taught by the Home Economics department. The cooking teachers dutifully put up a sign on the doors of the kitchen classrooms that read 'Food Science Laboratory'. The science teachers, whose classrooms were directly opposite, put signs up on their doors that read 'Real Science Laboratories'. Luckily it was the 1980s, and people could take a joke. If that happened now, the science teachers would have been castigated for microagression.

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May 28, 2023Liked by Robyn Chuter

Hi Robin, the inquisition was definitely the brain child of the Roman Catholic Church hierarchy. Most Catholics have no idea of the millions of martyrs that died as a result of the barbarism of the elite “rulers” of the church. After Constantine, pagan Rome became papal Rome and the ecclesiastics assumed authority and even invented documents to support said authority. This retired “library scientist 🤣” recommended reading is Ecclesiastical Megalomania by John Robbins; Romanism and the Reformation by Grattan Guinness; History of the Waldenses by Wylie; Rule by Secrecy by Jim Marrs; among others. Religion is not necessarily synonymous with a relationship with the creator but rather a ritualistic set of ‘control’ rules. There is definitely a “control” agenda that has been working behind the scenes for centuries that is in contrast to the creator’s gift of the freedom of choice.

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Thanks, that's an excellent reading list!

I was just reflecting yesterday, on the central tenet of Judeo-Christian belief - that humans can and should have a personal relationship with God, without requiring the intercession of the priestly caste - and how the religious institutions have consistently undermined this tenet. Jesus railed against the hypocritical priestly caste and reaffirmed that they were the obstacle to being in relationship to God, not the way. Then the church that formed after his death completely upended his teachings and interposed the priesthood between the people and God. Along comes Gutenberg with his printed bibles, and for the first time in over a thousand years, people could actually read the Bible rather than having to rely on the priests' interpretation of it. The religious wars that followed were the direct result of the church's refusal to give up control over the manner on which people experience spirituality, which is by definition a highly personal experience.

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May 29, 2023Liked by Robyn Chuter

Absolutely. A relationship with Jesus is not just a “religion” and totalitarian governments can’t stand that. True Christians cannot be controlled by such regimes. (In North Korea it is a death sentence to have a Bible. )

Ephesians 6:12 For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. So Satan’s puppets are attempting total control. Unfortunately for them, I’ve read the back of the book and they are the losers. But we will go through hell in the meantime.🫤

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