In this engaging episode of Radio Windmiller, we delve into a lively discussion with Mallificus Scott about the cultural and historical intricacies of Cornwall, including the age-old debate of "jam first" on scones. We explore the fascinating world of contrails versus chemtrails, touching on weather manipulation theories and the logistics behind them. Mallificus Scott shares insights into historical radar technologies and their impact, including the intriguing story of the Russian Woodpecker and its Cold War implications.
We also venture into the realm of historical and modern geopolitics, discussing the interconnectedness of global banking systems and the influence of powerful entities. The conversation touches on the manipulation of societal events, the role of media, and the ongoing struggle for personal freedoms in a centralized world. The episode wraps up with a light-hearted exploration of traditional drinks and remedies, including the surprising combination of vinegar and honey, known as oxymel, and its historical uses.
We assembled here today are issuing a new decree to be heard in every village in Plymouth and Tavistock and on the beach at Penn Dower. From this day forward, a new vision will govern our land. From this day forward, it's gonna be only jam first. Jam first. Every decision on scones, on splits, on clotted cream, on cakey tea affairs will be made to benefit Cornish workers and Cornish families. We must protect our borders from the ravages of Iverdeudny, making our pasties, stealing our cream, and destroying the word bay.
[00:01:38] Unknown:
Yeah. And it's Radio Windmiller. I'm here today with Maleficus Scott and it's 04/06/2025. Maleficus, you there? How you doing? Oh, it's it's a pleasure to pleasure to have you. Legitly, yeah. Live, yeah and an audience too, potentially. Yeah, me too, me too. I'm just flipping through some things here, because I apparently had the wrong settings on, so reintroduce yourself, Maleficus Scott.
[00:02:27] Unknown:
Sorry about that folks. I don't think they heard you because I had a wrong setting on there. Oh, okay. No worries. Well, yeah. No. I just said thanks for having me on. Radio Windmiller. Legit. Live. Excellent. I always like live radio.
[00:02:41] Unknown:
Yeah. I know. Isn't it fun? You get you get all these, you know, buttons that you have to press, especially if you're producing the show. Yeah.
[00:02:49] Unknown:
Yeah. I must admit, in my StreamYard days, it was all very much simplified. So I I haven't had to host for a little while. So that's that's kind of nice. All the pressure's off. So, it's all on you. I know.
[00:03:01] Unknown:
I know.
[00:03:03] Unknown:
Well, I hope as as I was just saying, I hope your listeners have had just as nice a day as I've had out here in the or down here, should I say, in the Cornish Riviera. It's been absolutely stunning. Not a cloud in the sky. The odd contrail, which disappeared
[00:03:21] Unknown:
almost straight away after the aircraft. I like it. I like it what you're saying. Contrail. You know?
[00:03:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[00:03:29] Unknown:
That's, that's been a theme of mine on these shows the past, I don't know, month almost now is is the contrail versus the chemtrail. And who Oh, I've seen the night thing then. Who done it? Who done it? Who done it?
[00:03:45] Unknown:
Who, you know, who thinks they're man enough to take on the weather? I'm sorry. I'm I'm I'm not entirely sold. I you know, I'm aware that, yeah, cloud seeding's a thing. I'm aware of that. You know, I know people in the military that have said, oh, yeah. Of course, we cloud seed, and we blah blah blah. But, to actually manipulate the weather, I should get my friend, Bastian, on here because he will tell you the the the actual logistics of getting an aircraft off the ground when you're having to make money out of a commercial airline, and with the taxis, etcetera, etcetera.
To make money out of a commercial airline, do you think they've got room to store another 600,000 gallons of something that they're gonna pump into the atmosphere at the same time? But maybe there's a subsidy. Maybe I'm missing something. I don't know. Yeah. Yeah. I don't I don't
[00:04:42] Unknown:
I why why would they? That's my question is what who who in their right mind would poison themselves?
[00:04:49] Unknown:
Well, not just that. I I think it's, you know, if you drop something at thirty six thousand feet Are they even able to? Yeah. Well, yeah. But the chances of it actually landing where you want it to land is pretty slim. I mean, you've got to really know which direction. Because let's not forget, the wind changes direction at different levels, at different you know, you get thermals that go up, and they cause different wind currents at different, heights. So sometimes you can see one lot of cloud really, really high up. Really simple example. You can see a lot of cloud really, really high up. Can't remember the name of it now. And then it seems to be traveling in one direction, but, no. Below it, there's an there's a group of cloud that is traveling pretty quickly, seemingly in another direction. It's not. It's an optical illusion. But what I'm saying is is that there's different wind currents at different, at different altitudes, and different temperatures, etcetera, etcetera. So yeah. And when you get up to 36,000 feet 32, 30 six thousand feet, I mean, you're looking you're at minus degrees up there anyway, regardless of the sunshine coming in the window, folks. You know? So, the chances of you actually getting something to drop where you want it to drop without some sort of huge I don't know. Without some sort of huge miracle, it is it's beyond me. So I understand them the idea of them sowing things into the atmosphere to, create rain, that's that's been done time and time again. It's been done down here by the military in Cornwall. There was a flood down in Boscastle, not the recent one in recent years. I'm talking recent decades. But, I think in the fifties or the sixties, there was a massive flood down there. And it later came out that the, RAF were trying out, you know, cloud seeding, caused a big flood in in a in a really, really nasty area to cause a flood. But, again, they had no control over where that was actually gonna occur.
So that's that's kinda my argument with it. So Well, do you think with supercomputers
[00:06:59] Unknown:
that they could do some sort of pre pre planning of this where they could
[00:07:04] Unknown:
figure it out? I mean, they have some pretty pretty fancy supercomputers these days. They've got some pretty fast they've got got some pretty amazing calculations if you're firing a bullet. Yeah. So, like, for instance, in the military, you know, you can you can with these, computer aided sites now on the sniper rifles and stuff, you can get shots off from a long, long way away, like, inconceivably, because it takes into account the distance and wind speeds and stuff. I don't know how it does it, but that's what they do. So I've been told. Right.
But that's a bullet. That's got an incredible amount of inertia and force behind it. Well, reading reading a box articulating something, you're not gonna get much inertia behind that. You're it's just where the wind's gonna blow. Sure.
[00:07:52] Unknown:
But at the same time, there would be a motivation to do it because, in World War two, they had windowing and chaff for messing with the enemy's radar. You would think they'd want
[00:08:03] Unknown:
Oh, go ahead. Windowing was simply a a means of blocking radar, and the Germans thought about doing it before the British. But they thought if they did it They'd give it away to the British. They'd give it away to the British. Little did they know, it was already probably given away by a spy, by a James Bond character.
[00:08:22] Unknown:
Yeah. Some some, yeah, some character. So explain what windowing is in CHF, because I I know a bit about it. It's like aluminum strips that they threw out the wings or the Yeah. Basically, all they would do is they would they would fly in,
[00:08:37] Unknown:
as the way it would normally work on it would be done on night operations. They'd fly in with, a large formation of aircraft in one direction. The genuine formation of aircraft would take off in another direction and circumnavigate you know, so it was all very, very cleverly coordinated. But the main one, where they wanted to feign that there was going to be a big concentration of bombers because the German night defenses were so, so effective, really. They had they were the first to fit radars on the front of the aircraft and all that kind of thing to detect planes in front of them. So they could guide literally guide through cloud, guide themselves to the oncoming bomber formations and stuff. So Germans were, I think it's Operation Wild Sao, if you look that one up, or Wild Sao in in, however you would pronounce it in German. But, Operation Wild Sao, that was a sort of, night fighting thing and the and the you the use of radar. So what the what the British basically did was pack one of these first or second bomber formations out. The German radar would see these bomber formations moving as they took off from England. So that that wasn't an issue.
But what they didn't know is what the concentrations were. And and when one particular branch broke off to feign an attack, what they would do is just dump millions and millions and millions of tiny, tiny little strips of aluminium foil, which would flutter down in the air and get caught in the wind currents and swirl about. And and they'd hang, really, for a long time because they're dropping them from a long way up. And this this adds to my particulate theory about dumping stuff on specific areas 32,000 feet below.
But that that would essentially, because radar basically works off of bouncing radio waves off of, essentially, solid objects. And metal tends to be a really, really good conductor reflector, when it comes to comes to radar. So, it would look you know, this one bomber formation would end up looking like a massive formation because of all the aluminum foil that the radar was bouncing off, and and it was receiving signals back. There's all this metal in the air. So it's it's as simple as that, really.
[00:10:59] Unknown:
Yeah. It seemed pretty primitive in a way. Radar was very primitive back then. You know? Isn't it like, like, they use something similar to a magnetron or or a device like you would have in a microwave oven?
[00:11:13] Unknown:
It is pretty much, yeah, it is pretty much that. I mean, I don't know the technical side of it. I know for a fact that, I know for a fact that Britain's radar was so far behind Germany's because we needed it up and running quickly, ready for the Battle of Britain. So we operated on a far lower frequency than the Germans expected us to. And, therefore, when they flew Zeppelins over at whatever height they flew over, sort of searching for radar capability in in Britain, They they conceived that they didn't actually pick anything up. And it later turned out later in the war that the minor interference that their that their, measuring equipment had suffered, the minor interference that they were getting while they were flying over Britain was actually the radar because it was it was so low a frequency. It was making all the rivets vibrate in the Zeppelin frames, and that's what was interfering with the equipment.
A silly bit of knowledge there, I know, but it's it's just one of those interesting little quirks of of of fate to me. It's fascinating.
[00:12:17] Unknown:
You wouldn't think that, but they were they were. They were just not on the same frequency.
[00:12:22] Unknown:
Is that, they, well, the Germans were operating on a higher frequency because obviously a higher frequency will travel further. So you've got more range on knowing how, you know, when the people are launching things. And yet at the same time for the submarines, they use ultra low frequency because I know this, we have a lot you have to penetrate water, and water's a lot thicker than air. It's it's it's rather like, when I used to, have a band practicing in my mom's garage, which my mom's garage was sort of, like, half underground, if you like. And, her neighbor next door to her on the other side used to moan that her chair vibrated because our bass player used to play too loud. Didn't seem that loud in the room, but, obviously, all the bass cranked right up, and she used to moan that her chair vibrated.
She she did actually moan to me about it one day, and I said, oh, lucky girl. Yeah. Now they pay high high bucks for a massage chair. Yeah. Vibrating chairs. She just had my mate, Rob, come and play bass next door. That would have done the trick. So yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, low frequency penetrates solid objects a lot easier. High frequency bounces off, obviously. It's almost like the whole idea of the acoustic foam that you put on, walls in recording studios or rooms you wanna soundproof or or deaden the sound in. But it's it's interesting. And I always thought because you can use egg cartons pretty much to the same effect. Old cardboard egg egg cartons. Or egg eggshell mattresses.
Eggshell mattresses. Yeah. Oh, is that what you call them?
[00:13:52] Unknown:
Yeah. Like foam foam with the the divots in them.
[00:13:57] Unknown:
Oh, yes. Yeah. Yeah. Oh, got you. Yeah. Yeah. So you can use all those. And I often thought it was the it was the peaks of the, the car and yeah. That would that would break up the sound waves. That's how it worked in my head. And it wasn't till the sound engineer turned around to me and went, no. No. No. No. No. He said, the the sound waves travel into the trough, and they've got nowhere to escape. Uh-huh. So that was, for me, that was kind of an eye opener for, you know, how that all kind of worked.
[00:14:26] Unknown:
Yeah. That makes sense. Yeah. Well, see these things? They it's fascinating the way that the contrail debate, you know, keeps going on. I I know in the when the Jets first came out during World War II, they were both, a curse and a blessing. They're, you know, mixed curse in there because you could see a trail behind them which gave away their position potentially in under the right weather conditions. And weather conditions seem to play a big role in whether a bombing run would be successful or not because of the fact that you could you could see the position of that formation a lot easier.
[00:15:11] Unknown:
Yeah. You you can, I suppose, because it generates more heat? But even a a piston aircraft, you get to a certain height, and you you will contrail. That's that's just what happened. The low pressure and the cold Yeah. Condensation. That's it. You you you but, I mean, listen. This is not to say that there is there is undoubtedly humans are pollutants on the planet. There's no doubt about that, in in this sort of fast, sort of industry based thing that that that we now live in, this industry based society that we now live in. No one wants to sort of, well, you know where I'm going, this whole whole centralized thing.
You know, because of that, you know, we all that all the big companies preach to be caring about the climate and and this, that, and the other, and yet they're producing goods which you're expected to throw away in eight months to sixteen months, you know, because they've they've you've reached their service life. You know? You don't get things repaired anymore. You know? But so we are pollutants of the planet. There's there's no doubt about that. And if there is enough pollutants in the air, you can get, I am told, persistent contrails where, the condensation of the, left by the aircraft, basically, is magnetized to you know, the the moisture is magnetized to sort of dirt parts some tiny minuscule dirt particles in the air. This is what I've been told.
And that in itself creates more moisture because, obviously, the the the whole thing of osmosis and and everything at that that height, you know, the the water will globulize together the same as the air. You know, they'll the the two elements force each other apart, if you get what I mean, or or or attract each other. So I do understand the the, idea of persistent contrails being down to pollution. Because there's no doubt that there are persistent contrails that do spread out. We have I've seen it occur over my house on on several occasions, but I've I I'm under the impression that that's either down to air pressure or pollutant yeah. Particulate pollutants in the air, potentially.
[00:17:23] Unknown:
No. You mentioned the Zeppelins and and the radar causing vibrations in the rivets of the the Zeppelin. Yeah. Could it potentially could the radar potentially change weather patterns as a consequence of that kind of behavior, do you think? I don't work? I
[00:17:44] Unknown:
well, so this yeah. I don't know. It's a good question, isn't it? It's a good question. I I think the reason the reason it's an interesting question is because we have you so I'm gonna take you back to the whole idea of the Dougar radar during the cold cold war. So, you know, the Chernobyl plant was built to power the Dougar radar, Dougar one and two. And over here, it was known as the Russian Woodpecker because radio hams over here were on certain frequency would experience this tapping sound. And it was the interference from the Dugar radar, which was supposed to be, quote, unquote, an early warning system radar system.
And because of the curvature of the Earth, they had to bounce the signal of the radar off of the ionosphere. Okay. And it caused
[00:18:39] Unknown:
enough interference to jam the signal for just a brief moment that it created that little ticking sound?
[00:18:46] Unknown:
Yes. Yeah. Because it operated at a certain frequency. You can go on to YouTube now and just type in Russian woodpecker, and you will you'll hear examples of it, that people have had recorded from back in the, like, the eighties and stuff. So there are examples of it out there. If if that was going to change the weather weather in any way, shape, or form, we would have known about that by now. We're talking seriously high power high power radar, you know, radio frequencies being bounced off of the ionosphere and back down towards, America.
Because yeah. Because the first two and to to put paid to anyone that's gonna argue with that, the first Dugard radar they built wasn't high enough to get the right angle to bounce it down further across the planet. So that kind of blows the flat earth people out of the water for me, personally, and the whole fact that we might be able to change the weather. I mean, this whole HAARP thing, I think it's just, I think, personally, yeah, you might be able to manipulate. I don't see a thing is I'm not a big enough physicist to be able I'm not a physicist to be able to expert either in any of this. It's just speculation. Yeah. It's speculation.
But I would say that HAARP is more likely to be some sort of radar radio, stroke, spying system than it is to be any kind of weather changing thing. That's, you know I I'm sure some expert that's worked at HAARP, who might well be listening, would like to club me around the head with something, hopefully, rather soft but heavy, at this moment in time. But, you know, I'm not expert enough to know. My my whole thing with the Duguid radar is if if you were gonna use huge amounts of radio frequency to change weather patterns, it would have already happened by now.
[00:20:48] Unknown:
Yeah. And with radio, for instance, you have the difference between AM and FM. Mhmm. AM has a lot more of that kind of like skip type pattern that you were talking about with the radar where it would go all the way across the globe. And AM is kind of set up that way where it'll go for a long distance. Whereas FM is more localized but a greater,
[00:21:18] Unknown:
Well, it's a modulated frequency.
[00:21:20] Unknown:
Yeah. So you don't get as much bleed over from other transmissions. It's either the most powerful transmission is the dominant one and that's what you hear. Whereas with AM, you can get, you can get cross channel channeling going from different stations and hear the one. So so back in the eighties, when we used to, like, listening to
[00:21:40] Unknown:
Atlantic two five two radio, which came out of somewhere like Luxembourg, I believe it came out of. We could pick it up here in Cornwall. But at certain times in the evening, all the radio shows would be on on other channels, which would interfere it, and they'd bleed through. And it was most frustrating as a child, because that's where all the good music was back in the eighties, if you'll believe it. I believe
[00:22:03] Unknown:
it. I used to, I used to mess around on the shortwave, you know, listening to all the different stations throughout the world. And they would have stations in other places like Pyongyang. I always remember that was kind of bizarre listening to the to the North Korean broadcast propaganda and then they'd have a A friend of oh, go on. Sorry. Carry on. And then they have places like Iraq where everything was jammed so that they couldn't get their signals out with
[00:22:32] Unknown:
Right. That sort of thing. What were you gonna say about your friend? I was gonna say a friend of mine was a radio ham back at the time back in the days when Gorbachev stepped down from, his position in Russia. You know, just after the Cold War, and he'd done his bit, and and we've ended the Cold War, and blah blah blah blah blah. The my friend was listening to BBC Radio Moscow on the day that he or the day before he stepped down. And, BBC Radio Moscow at that time, according to him and he's got he's he's far from, quote, unquote, a conspiracy theorist. He's he's, he's a he's an honest, you know, meat and two veg man, if you get what I mean. And, he said, no. He said, I swear to you, he said, the day before Gorbachev stepped down, there was a broadcast from BBC Radio Moscow saying that Gorbachev had been overthrown.
So that's that's an interesting, little thing that
[00:23:32] Unknown:
that I did. Yeah. And I I don't know if it was before or after that that the, Supreme Soviet decided to abolish itself, and that's when the current government that was formed after that became the Russian government.
[00:23:46] Unknown:
Yeah. I mean, guys, I'm not saying that Gorbachev was a nice chap. Yeah. But Yeah. I don't I don't know one way or the other. Just saying that the you know, we we were told we were always told that he stepped down. He didn't step down at all. Not according to the first broadcast from the BBC that was actually corresponding from Russia. Yeah. Wow. Interesting.
[00:24:04] Unknown:
It is. It is. It's probably something most people don't hear about or know about.
[00:24:10] Unknown:
I've only ever heard it from him, but he swears blind. And, you know, he was into that sort of thing back in the day. Because when I was talking to him about this was back in 02/2001, '2 thousand and '2 when I was talking to him about there's no way those two towers went down with just jet fuel, you know. Three three towers, you mean? Yeah. The three towers. Yeah. And and the center of, I think, Tower 5, wasn't it? Managed to they managed to hollow out Tower 5. I don't know how they did that.
[00:24:37] Unknown:
But what you're talking about getting that information ahead of time is interesting. It reminds me of the, a story I read about Johnny Cash. And, actually, I think I heard that from one of the RBN hosts, probably Mike Gaddy or somebody like that. And he was talking about how Johnny Cash was a radio operator during, like, 1950, and he was the first person, or one of the first people to learn that Stalin was dead. And he knew it, like, days in advance of anybody in the West. Wow. Before it had been announced. He was, he was apparently a a radio operator before he was a famous musician for the US Army over at stationed in Germany somewhere.
[00:25:22] Unknown:
Wow. Yeah. But then I guess a lot of people were back in those days. You were lucky to survive it. Let's be honest.
[00:25:30] Unknown:
Yeah. In 1950, I I guess the war had pretty much been over. Wasn't the hunger year '46 to '47, something like that?
[00:25:39] Unknown:
Yeah. He was he was poisoned, wasn't he, Stalin? Same as, I think, Lenin was poisoned as well. Roosevelt,
[00:25:45] Unknown:
I think, I'd heard he told, he told Kermit Roosevelt, who was the son of Theodore Roosevelt, that he, he was pretty sure that Churchill's boys had poisoned Roosevelt.
[00:26:01] Unknown:
Wouldn't surprise me. I would put nothing. I would put, yeah, I would put nothing, after the British Secret Service.
[00:26:12] Unknown:
That's true. That's something I'd heard on Jeff Rentz's
[00:26:16] Unknown:
broadcast years ago. It's interesting because, you know, I mean, you know, all governments operate like that. They operate within their own interests, don't they? You know? And it wouldn't surprise me, because he came out with a he ended up with a nasty bout of cancer, didn't he? Which was pretty rigorous.
[00:26:36] Unknown:
And wasn't it? It was shortly after Yalta.
[00:26:40] Unknown:
No, he was already ill at Yalta. At Yalta?
[00:26:43] Unknown:
Yeah, because he was on a cane, wasn't he? He was on a cane for a little while. I think he would, all of his, all of the time he was president, he had a problem. I think he was in a wheelchair even, for most of the time he was in pres, was the president. And it was, he was very rarely shown walking in, old news clips. I could be mistaken on that, but that's, that's the story that I heard. And even then, the time I think he was the governor of New York, or mayor of New York City.
[00:27:12] Unknown:
Well, there's a problem. There's two interesting interactions. There are two interesting books that describe interactions between Roosevelt and, Churchill. One is The Phony Victory by, I think he's, sort of Peter Hitchens, the brother of Christopher Hitchens. Yep. Yep. I I play his, he's got a new podcast. I play it here on Radio Windmill every single week. Oh, okay. So I don't keep up with PTHN's at all, but I did, purchase that book, The Phony Victory. And he points to a lot of things that I'm not being funny, Patrick. Probably a lot of your audience are gonna go, well, we knew a lot of that already. But it's one of those great books that you can hand to like You'd be surprised. I got a lot of normies.
[00:27:58] Unknown:
So so so called normies that listen, mostly family and friends. Not for long. Not for long. Not for long. Not for long. If they listen soon enough.
[00:28:09] Unknown:
Well, you know, not offering any solutions, just observations, you know. But, no, there's two interesting books. So one would be, The Phony Victory by Peter Hitchens. That's a really good read. And it's one of those books that you could probably give to anyone. It no matter how pro or anti British they were, particularly pro British people, it's a great book for because they they read through it and they go, well, this can't be denied. And, oh, they were a bit you know, some of those decisions were a bit dodgy. Anyway, so that's that's that's an interesting one. And also, a book called The Morgantown Plan, by David Irving.
So he I've lent it out at the moment, so I can't read you off of the cover. I've lent it out to someone that that wanted to read it, and I don't normally rent out, lend out books, but this was an exception. But the Morgan Tower plan by David Irving, there's there's a brilliant for like, forward to the book which takes up, I don't know, probably an eighth of the book. And then the rest of it is all the documents and all the all the government proposals and documents, signed between them. But one of the interesting facts about that is that Churchill was quite happy, making out to Roosevelt, that he'd be quite happy to merge because Britain owed America so much, that he'd be quite happy to merge the British pound and the US dollar.
And Churchill even came out with a design that amalgamated the two logos, if you like. Interesting.
[00:29:43] Unknown:
Have you heard well, this is kind of related to today. Have you heard about Donald Trump saying that he wants America to become part of the British Commonwealth? Look.
[00:29:56] Unknown:
I'm sure. I'm not joking. He he he came out. Yeah. I know. But, you know, I'm sorry. I just I nothing surprises me anymore, and I find it laughable. I honestly do. This is just more smoke and mirrors for everyone to get worked up and wound up about. It's the same wallet all the time. It's the same wallet. Right? So we get people I've heard people on independent radio saying, well, you know, we're still under the British crowd and all this kind of thing. No. You're not. You're all under the bankers. All of you. All of you. All of us. You know? Ask Liz As Liz Truss.
Ask Liz Truss. Ask Liz Truss. She she said, the
[00:30:33] Unknown:
the head of the Bank of England has more power than the Prime Minister of England
[00:30:37] Unknown:
of The UK. I have more power than the king. You don't you don't get to prod the king in the chest while you're talking to him without having a Who who was that character, the Rothschild? That was while the king was a prince. And it was, I think it was I think it was Evelyn de Rothschild, I think. Evelyn de Rothschild. Okay. Yeah. I think if you look that up, you you if you look up Evelyn de Rothschild and Prince Charles, there's a very famous photograph. I've seen him him poking Prince Charles in the chest while he's talking to him. And he's towering over him. And Prince Charles has got this, like, Deer in the headlights. Dog. Yeah. Puppy dog look at his face like that. You know, when a dog gives you the side eye, like, oh, am I in trouble? Sorry. I shouldn't mark because these people are apparently
[00:31:22] Unknown:
No. We should pray for them more than anything.
[00:31:25] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You should. You should pity them. You know? But as you say, I hear all these people saying that we're, you know, we're you know, US is still under the British crown. No. We're all under the bankers. You know? Just just to remind the listener, anyone that hasn't heard me before, I'm just gonna give you a quick rundown of this Putin Putin Ukraine deal. Right? Good. If Putin If if Putin had wanted or or had not wanted his allies to move one inch closer, why did he precipitate a long war whereby all the western allies would be buying up Ukraine at a rate of knots by selling them arms, and how are they gonna pay it back? So Putin has facilitated that, transfer of of wealth.
[00:32:14] Unknown:
He doesn't care. What should he have done?
[00:32:16] Unknown:
What should he have done? He should it it what he should have really done is, in my opinion, just come clean at some point on TV and said, look. This whole thing is a big scam. Our bank is a member of the Bank of International Settlements, the same as your bank is a bank a member of the Bank of International Settlements. In fact, most countries in the world, most large most of the largest economies in the world, all the largest economies in the world have a bank of international settlements. So, they're all part and parcel. You know, you should just come out and be honest. You know, the truth will set you free, Vlad. You know?
[00:32:58] Unknown:
Yeah. It'd be helping an awful lot of us. For our listeners, the Bank of International Settlements is, actually, it's actually a place in Basel, Switzerland, just across the border from Freiburg, Germany, Kind of near Strasbourg, France. It's like, where the three countries meet near there, on the Danube, I believe. It's, an old, old place, for banking. It's one of the oldest places, in fact.
[00:33:28] Unknown:
And that's why it's the the center of the center of all these different things. Do you remember the old days, if you had a Swiss bank account, you didn't pay tax on the interest you earned over here. It was untouchable over here. If you had a Swiss bank account, you could store your money away, legitimately, without the government over here having any say over it, because it's out of their jurisdiction. Whereas if you store your money in any bank, in any anywhere else in the world, that's not the case. That kinda changed after the euro was introduced and, you know, the the trade towers went down
[00:33:58] Unknown:
Yeah. In the 02/2000
[00:34:01] Unknown:
I bet there's some people that can invest their interest free or tax free.
[00:34:06] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, don't don't you have, the Barbados and The Bahamas and places like that that have, banks, sovereign banks that you can store your wealth and not pay tax on it? Isn't that a lot of them do? Wasn't there, some sort of files that came out that probably about ten years ago or thereabouts?
[00:34:30] Unknown:
Some Well, there's always been this case of offshore bank accounts. There's always been this thing. Oh, so and so has got an offshore bank account with this much in it. Or, or, you know, there's always been stuff leaked out like that in the media anyway. But again, this whole media thing, this whole media charade, this, you know, the fact that Trump is is saying that. This is just this is just to get all you guys out there running around like headless chickens going, what? He's gonna do what? You know? And in actual fact, whether he does or whether he doesn't, it's actually not gonna make any difference to the state of things because the state of things are gonna continue in the way that they are and the way that they have been. And they're gonna get worse for us and better for a minor a very small minority.
And they'll be less they'll have more control and we'll have less freedom. But for most folks, it's like as long as they've got their creature comforts, you know, please take away my freedoms, but leave me my iPhone, you know, which I'm glued to and I can't get away from. And I can't even have a conversation with the same person in the room without actually flicking them a photograph onto their phone, Bluetooth, or or via WhatsApp. You know, it's just yeah.
[00:35:42] Unknown:
You get where I'm going. Yeah. I heard I heard somebody who had gone down to the Twin Cities here, and they were saying that there are protests over this whole Doge thing with Elon Musk, and they're cutting cutting these big government programs and laying off government employees. So they're all upset that their creature comforts are going away.
[00:36:02] Unknown:
Yeah. But they were gonna do it anyway. It's just what label they put on it. See, if you can hear any water in the background, it's just me pouring fruit tea, by the way, folks listening out there. So apologies. It's not not anything nefarious. Yeah. No. I mean, it doesn't matter how you dress it up. They, whoever they are, quote unquote, are trying to centralize everything. So and there's no such thing as a defeat for these people. There's only setbacks because they think intergenerationally. They don't think in terms of their own lifetime. So you're when you're up against a a group of people like that, it's very, very difficult to convince people that it's worth keeping up the struggle because, hey, man, take away my take away my freedoms and just leave me with my creature comforts. I just want a peaceful life.
And, sadly, everyone's apathy is really is really what we, me and you, and the likes of the people that do have their heads slightly above the parapet. That's that's what we're trying to cure. We're trying to look for a cure for Addison's disease, aren't we?
[00:37:14] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you mentioned, President Putin and what he, the mistake he made or whether it was intentional or not. I'd been over there to Kursk where a lot of the Ukraine army had invaded and it's just kind of, I really feel bad for the people that live there because they're good people as far as I can tell. Absolutely. I did nothing but kindness when I went there and just awe that American American would come and visit them, and have communication with them and like and actually want to learn about their culture?
[00:37:52] Unknown:
I think I think David Irving summed it up perfectly when he said wars aren't about governments fighting governments. It's an innocent aside. It's innocent people bear the brunt of government decisions. There always is. And it's always the the best people that seem to go first. I mean, Patrick, you were talking to me a couple of years ago when all this kicked off with Ukraine. You were talking to me with my mate, Chris, from Hungary. And he was talking about friends of his that had gone over the border into Ukraine, looking for work and ended up being press ganged into the into the army.
[00:38:25] Unknown:
Yeah. And this is Hungary right next to Ukraine.
[00:38:28] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. So, you know, me and Patrick caught up with it. He's a friend, just a friend of mine that I used to play computer games with. Born and bred hung hungry. We always used to have a laugh about, you know, how's the fence doing, Chris? And he'd be like, oh, it's got a few holes in it now, you know. Because whether listeners know or not, Hungary was one of the only people that was part of Europe that refused to take in any immigrants. And they built a fence around the entire time. Poland. Poland did too. Poland was another one, but they they yeah. I mean, hung Hungary was vehement about it to the point where they they erected massive fences on the borders and stuff, you know. So
[00:39:10] Unknown:
They probably didn't deal with Poland. And then now Ukraine is it's just a basket case. It should be the bread basket. Now it's just a bread the basket. We'll call it the bread basket case of Europe. It's
[00:39:24] Unknown:
Well, I think, yeah, it maybe you could call it that. But sadly, it's a term, to term an earlier phrase of the last century, it's become the killing fields. Which is, you know, it's just another place where, those small minority who consider themselves at the top of everyone else decide that they want something in such a way that innocent people have to die for it. And sadly, 50% of the reasoning for doing it in certain areas in the first place is the latter reason, that they want, you know, innocent people to die. That's how else can you dress it up?
How else can you dress it up? You know, there are always, look at our policies in World War II. You know, this has been occurring throughout history. Our policies in World War II were not to bomb the, the industry centers. Yes, we did. But we got far better results when we bombed the population that worked on those industry centers. So we went to the bombing in for most of World War II, as far as the British and the Americans were concerned, like it or not, was not about strategical bombing. It was about displacement of citizens.
[00:40:39] Unknown:
Yeah. The workers that would then rebuild after the factories had been bombed is is a devilish plan to get rid of them so they wouldn't rebuild. It just
[00:40:49] Unknown:
wipes people out. It wipes out innocent people. It's innocent people. You know, they always say, Oh, no, you know, if it's a noncombatant and blah, blah, how do they tell who's a noncombatant from 30,000 feet? They don't. They just drop the bombs where the flare markers are. And there's a lot of World War II guys who carried that, that, that knowledge to their grave.
[00:41:11] Unknown:
Well, and the, the, it's that same mentality we have to this day, in our governments, in the West, where the idea that, well, we've got to kill women and children because the children will grow up to become the terrorists. It's that mentality that at the very top that they're perpetrating that mentality to the militaries. And that's why, I think religion has a large part to play in this because if you had people of moral principles and God God, you know, understood God's commandments and could were obedient to that, you wouldn't have this mess that we're in. And, and Well, I think my granddad that this needs to be there.
[00:41:58] Unknown:
My granddad touched on this in his, Bon Accord Congregational
[00:42:03] Unknown:
Church. Your granddad what's your granddad's name again for people that might not know?
[00:42:08] Unknown:
So, Lieutenant Colonel John Cray Scott wrote a book called Hidden Government, but he also, wrote a book that you can find in the Massachusetts University. It's the only place I've managed to actually find a copy of it, and they kindly actually, photocopied it and sent me a copy of it, under radicalism. But he talked about, manufactured shortage in that speech. But he also talked about how the fact is that people are are worshiping man's policy and not God's. And, you know, none of this is by divine order. The world has got plenty for everyone. But, you know, and the the fact that people are relying on man's policies and then still wondering what the problem is afterwards, in some respects, beggars belief.
You know, we should be we should be laughing at these policies and saying, you intend to do what? But this takes away this. This takes away, you know, this takes away personal freedoms. This takes away our right to live. You know, if anyone wants a copy of that, speech, either email me or Patrick. I am [email protected], m a, double l, I f I c u s, m a, double l, I f I c u s at outlook dot com, and I'll just send you a copy of the speech. It's, you know, you gave the speech in 1936. He talks about manufactured shortage that we suffer nowadays.
You know, manufactured shortage on behalf of governments to keep certain things in check, and to keep populations in check, and to, keep industry in check.
[00:43:50] Unknown:
So that's The one that comes to mind here is the new new shortage of eggs that happened over the this the beginning of this year, where egg prices went up from, you know, what was that? Like a dollar, 2 dollars, a dozen? It shot up to seven or eight dollars per dozen locally here. And some places, it was even higher, like $10. You go out to San Francisco, Twelve Dollars, a dollar an egg. It doesn't surprise me. It doesn't surprise me. But this is And then what they did is they said, well, we gotta do a trade deal then with Turkey, the country of Turkey,
[00:44:27] Unknown:
and they're gonna supply us with eggs. It's like Oh, look. So this is problem, reaction, solution. Yeah. I was listening to Blackbird Nine Show, quite a few weeks back now, and he had, a chat from South Africa on. And one thing I found really interesting that he pointed out was that, they are used to a thing called rolling blackouts in most parts of South Africa. And that is that the energy grid can't keep up with demand, so some people have to be blacked out while they supply electricity elsewhere and and this guy. So everyone everyone in South Africa has their own generator in their back garden. Oh, oh, you know, electric's gone down. Quick, get the generator. Yeah. Load shedding, they call it. Load shedding. Yeah. Rolling blackouts.
And, he said, for last year, for eight months during the election season, nowhere in South Africa had any blackouts.
[00:45:17] Unknown:
During the election season. Isn't that interesting? Yeah. That's like, that's like heroin prices. You know, when they want a protest, they just increase the street value of these illegal drugs and then when they want to get their guy elected they do that kind of thing and then he gets elected and then they lower the price or vice versa depending on who they want to get in there. Yeah. Someone who's stocked out on the that's
[00:45:40] Unknown:
a lot of what MK Ultra was about, you know, manipulation of societal events through the use of back then, it was LSD. But, you know, there are people like, Manson and lots of not just him, but other prominent people that were all turning up to these so called shrink clinics and being administered LSD. And, you know, it was a huge social experiment back then. Massive social experiment. It's no different now. There look at the COVID jab. I mean, that was an experiment. I don't care if anyone is listening and says, oh, you can't say something like that. It was an experiment. It wasn't fully tested.
So anyone that can turn around to me and tell me that it was fully tested, no, it was an experiment. And they experiment on us all the time. We suddenly find out that fake sweeteners are no good for us, but there's a tax on sugar.
[00:46:36] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, and you reminded me, did you did you try that vinegar and honey?
[00:46:41] Unknown:
I did. I was waiting for you to ask, actually. So this vinegar and honey thing so I did exactly what you said. I had some runny honey, some some, you know, as opposed to set honey. I had some nice runny honey. Not brilliant honey, though. Shop bought stuff over here, bought from the supermarkets. It's made from honey sourced from shit who knows where and lots of different places, and they top it up with sugar. So unless you go and buy a locally made pot of honey, which will cost you in the region of somewhere between 6 and 10 UK pounds over here for a little jar, it's not proper honey, but it's near enough. It tastes near enough. Alright. So that's all I had in the cupboard, so that's what I used. I used a malt vinegar, and I stirred it in fifty fifty.
And it was like one of those sort of when I was raising the glass to my lips, I don't I don't mind telling you, there was a bit of trepidation, like, I don't know, like like when you said to me about the, the Water of Life book. I'm not sure if I could bring a glass of urine to my mouth. Let me try. Yeah. It's But so I had that sort of trepidation that those little sort of butterflies in the store. What's this gonna be like? Because vinegar and honey together And I got what you were saying. The, the, the, the, the acidity is neutralized by the sugar. And so I was taking all that on board when I was mixing it together and bringing out tomatoes. And I have to say, I was really pleasantly surprised, really quite pleasantly surprised, to the point where I had about half of what I had, and it got too sweet for me. So I'm a vinegar fan anyway, as I said to you before. Really big vinegar fan. Give me a plate of freshly chopped cherry tomatoes with some balsamic vinegar and, like, you you know, they're mine. You can bring all the party food out for other people. I don't care.
But so I found it a bit sweet, so I couldn't drink it all. And I think if I did it again, I probably wouldn't use a malt vinegar. I'd maybe use a cider vinegar or, as you say, a wine vinegar, a red or a white wine vinegar. Because the malt vinegar was a little bit
[00:49:00] Unknown:
malty. What can I say? Yeah. I tried I tried some malt vinegar just to see what it was like. I I I prefer red wine vinegar.
[00:49:08] Unknown:
I mean So I'm gonna have to give that a go. I I I have to say, it wasn't entirely unpleasant. Although it was a bit I don't, I can't have I don't eat caramel and things like that. And it did sort of remind me of that a bit. And I didn't want to add any more malt vinegar to counter that because it was already pretty vinegary. Yeah.
[00:49:27] Unknown:
So Yeah. Well, interesting. You're pleasantly surprised. That's good. That's positive. And I learned about it. And, somebody had sent me a video. It was Mer Bailey, from BB9's chat. Oh, yeah. And she it was, one of these reenactment type things where you historical costumes, kitchen and this kind of thing. And they were talking about this drink called raspberry shrub, which was vinegar, sugar, and raspberries. And mixed, mixed together as a syrup and then you add water to it like Kool Aid and drink it and it's refreshing in the summertime and replenishes. Like, early early days Gatorade
[00:50:12] Unknown:
in a way behind the scenes. Yeah. I would imagine that would be. Because the vinegar peps you up as much as and the sugar gives you obviously a lot of energy. And you get the taste of the fruit. That would probably be quite nice. And not forgetting, you know, if you're making a proper sweet and sour sauce, not the sort of stuff that they tell you to make with tomato, ketchup, and jam, and stuff. But if you're making a proper sweet and sour sauce, you need the acidity as well. And sometimes, like rice wine vinegar and stuff is good to use for that. So, you know, to because getting the whole sweet and sour thing, well, that's one of the things about Chinese cooking, which is actually rather clever, is because it's very difficult to get your tongue to differentiate, because there's a much larger part of your tongue that experiences sour and salty stuff than there is the sweet stuff, which is only experienced at the very frontal tip of the tongue.
So it's a real careful balance when you actually make those foods. What
[00:51:09] Unknown:
got me though was I started looking into how to make raspberry shrub. And from there, they have another drink called Switchel, which was a British American type drink in the colonies that was quite popular. And, and they'd mix it with rum and that kind of thing. But, then Sounds even better. It sounds, they use it as a cocktail mixer in certain quantities. So, then from there, I learned about this, this ancient medicine called oxymel, which is half vinegar. It was I think in the ancient times they used a lot more honey than they did the vinegar. So, it was maybe more like three parts to one part vinegar.
But it still, they used it as a medicine for inflammation and for various other diseases. If you read the books of Hippocrates, where the Hippocratic Oath comes from, he mentions oxymel as a Right. A thing for digestion and for inflammation, all sorts of things for healing wounds as an antibiotic.
[00:52:16] Unknown:
Yeah. And there's I've heard that as well. Although I have heard, you know, some burn victims have tried putting honey on a,
[00:52:21] Unknown:
honey on a on a wound, and it's really I don't know if I would do that. I'd I'd put urine on this or I'd put vinegar or honey on a a burn wound.
[00:52:29] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. So, yeah, I've heard horror stories about people doing that. So, they have to scrub the wound, you know, literally scrub it because to get the all the sugars out and everything. So it's just not not good. So for, like, arthritis and stuff, I've heard that well, they they the writings on it are
[00:52:48] Unknown:
tremendous. Like, if you take any of the ingredients, vinegar or honey by themselves as antibiotic or bacterial, they are good. Vinegar is stronger than honey. But if you mix the two together, it's something like a thousand times stronger than vinegar when you mix vinegar with honey. Well, it certainly was a nice tincture, I have to say. Yeah. It was it was They mix herbs with it too. It's another way of of getting herbs.
[00:53:18] Unknown:
I would imagine. And syrup. Yeah. I would imagine things like clove oil and things like that because that's obviously a natural sort of analgesic as well. So
[00:53:27] Unknown:
Yeah. It's kind of a good base for that. And it's a way to get people to take it because of the sweetness of the honey.
[00:53:34] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Well, I have to say it wasn't entirely unpleasant. I was, I was quite surprised. And I wouldn't actually mind trying it again
[00:53:41] Unknown:
with a different type of vinegar, not milder. Vinegar then that's a little bit lower acidity. Higher acidity acidity will, be a little hard harder to take, obviously.
[00:53:54] Unknown:
Yeah, I
[00:53:55] Unknown:
mean, don't get me wrong. What you do, well, hey, here, this is what you do, I found this out about making red wine into vinegar. You take a wine bottle, uncork it, and you put some cheesecloth over it so you don't get bugs in there, and let it sit out to oxidate for a couple weeks and it turns to vinegar. Right. And then use it like that. The old Roman soldiers used to drink just vinegar water, the poor, the poorer people would, the poorer classes in Roman days would drink that, whereas the commanders and the rich people would drink the wine. Yeah, that's interesting. And, and vinegar is nothing more than oxidized wine. And whereas, if you're baking wine, you want to keep as much oxygen out of it when you're fermenting it. And then when you, when you put it in a cask or a barrel, it's sealed off from oxygen, which is is great. But, we're running we're running low on time here. And, so thank you everybody for for, listening in. Thank you, Maleficus, for
[00:55:00] Unknown:
for joining me. It's been great to actually just catch up. I forgot we were actually on a radio show there, mate. So apologies, folks, but I did I forgot you were there. No. Seriously. Great to catch up, and thanks for having me on.
[00:55:14] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, I hope to have you back soon because I've been doing this a lot more. I'm gonna get a little more prolific. So Alright. Take care, everybody. God bless. See you. Good night and good day.
[00:55:30] Unknown:
To join with my side. But the voices that I hear through the walls late at night tell the tales of the brave ones who fought and who died. My sunset saw a sliver of light up on my wall. 10 feet above my head, but I don't see the sun at all. That's my hand, that's my hand. Holding my flag as high as I can. That's my hand. That's my hand. Let the stripes on my shoulder explain who I am. And if I ever get out of this war alive, I'll run straight back to my farm, to my children and my wife. She looks out on the land that our crops used to fill, She remembers a young man behind the horse in the field.
She's probably chopping wood before the leaves begin to fall. She looks out every day, but she don't see her man at all. That's my hand, that's my hand. Holding my flag as high as I can. That's my hand, that's my hand Let the laughter of my children explain who I am And if I never never get out of this world alive I want my family to be with me Holdin' hands at my bedside And if I have any last words I hope that they would come out right Words like don't delay your love Don't be afraid to waste your time When the sunset is the last one, I know I'll ever see.
Does the sacrifice of my generation die along with me? That's my hand, that's my hand. Holding my flag as as high as I can That's my hand That's my hand Let the words on my tomb stone explain who I am.