Planet Mind Control
Jason Christoff has released a new film exploring how the choices we think we're making aren't really ours at all— they're being made for us. It's psychological warfare in plain sight, and we're blind to it.
I'm an award-winning South African political cartoonist and podcast host. I'm neither left-wing nor right-wing; I'm the middle finger.
Jason Christoff has released a new film exploring how the choices we think we're making aren't really ours at all— they're being made for us. It's psychological warfare in plain sight, and we're blind to it.
Ferdinand Rabie won the first South African Big Brother back in 2001. What's he been up to? Where is he now? I caught up with him.
For centuries, we have been taught the heliocentric model—that the Earth revolves around the Sun. This, argues Simon Shack, is false. His work expands on earlier work that has long been forgotten.
South Africa is a country with a pile of problems, but it's still Jarette's home. He loves it and he's staying.
Reyno de Beer headed up a crowd-funded organisation to fight for liberty during the madness of 2020 and onwards. He's on the right side of history.
How did the Apollo astronauts capture such beautiful and perfect photos on the moon? They were in a studio, argues Massimo Mazzucco, adding that there is no plausible way the official pics were snapped on the lunar surface.
All my life, I've been told that the germs in unpasteurised milk are dangerous and that I should only drink pasteurised milk. I was lied to. There is nothing wrong with raw milk. In fact, it's healthier.
Patricia Casazza's husband called her from the 104th floor, knowing he wouldn't make it out, shortly before the Twin Towers collapsed. She also questions whether planes actually hit the buildings.
Dustin Nemos seems to provoke strong reactions from everybody — even banks have shut down his account. What’s he saying that’s so dangerous?
Catherine Austin Fitts is an investment advisor and former Wall Street managing director at Dillon, Read & Co. She served
It's subtle and subversive—most people don't even notice it—but young Americans are being gradually steered toward an engineered worldview.
Probability theory debunks the Apollo missions, argues Ferdinand Santos. The entire story is ridiculous, he says, from leaving Earth, to travelling to the moon, to landing on the moon, to walking on the moon, to leaving the moon, to returning to Earth, all without a single issue.
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