Interview 1301 – New World Next Week with James Evan Pilato

by | Sep 21, 2017 | Interviews | 32 comments

Welcome to New World Next Week – the video series from Corbett Report and Media Monarchy that covers some of the most important developments in open source intelligence news. This week:

Story #1: Agencies Suing Citizens, Journalists Who Seek Public Records
https://twitter.com/milesoftruth/status/909777974483922944

Entire Volume of CIA Files On Lee Harvey Oswald, Set to Be Released in October, Has ‘Gone Missing’
http://thefreethoughtproject.com/cia-volume-oswald-missing/

The CIA Preps Their Next JFK Psyop
https://www.bitchute.com/video/N9rfdNf5zro/

Story #2: PM May Warns Tech Firms Over Terror Content
https://twitter.com/rayvahey/status/910513279939706880

Facebook, Google Are ‘Surveillance States’ That Risk Regulation
https://twitter.com/rayvahey/status/909826822065471489

Trump, Netanyahu Ready United Assault Against Iran Nuclear Deal
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/sep/18/trump-netanyahu-iran-nuclear-deal-united-nations-general-assembly

Netanyahu Hails Trump’s ‘Courageous’ UN Speech Blasting Iran
https://www.timesofisrael.com/netanyahu-hails-trumps-courageous-un-speech-blasting-iran/

Netanyahu: Trump Is Changing the World by Supporting Israel
http://www.newsweek.com/iran-netanyahu-join-trump-attack-iran-deal-un-667741

Story #3: Higher Fluoride In Urine Linked to Lower IQ In Children
http://www.ctvnews.ca/health/higher-levels-of-fluoride-in-urine-linked-to-lower-iq-scores-in-children-1.3595337

Search: “Fluoride”
https://www.corbettreport.com/?s=fluoride

Are you SURE those “fluoride filters” are working?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oMFdauShHaM

Prenatal Fluoride Exposure and Cognitive Outcomes in Children at 4 and 6–12 Years of Age in Mexico
https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/ehp655/

A Different Study Shows That Flame-Retardant Chemicals Also Make You Stupid
https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/ehp1632/

Dryer Sheets Make You Dumber, As Well
https://www.livescience.com/49087-phthalates-exposure-lower-iq-kids.html

You can help support our independent and non-commercial work by visiting http://CorbettReport.com/Support & http://MediaMonarchy.com/Support. Thank You.

32 Comments

  1. More on this landmark Fluoride Study…
    https://ehp.niehs.nih.gov/ehp655/
    The study demonstrates that when pregnant mothers drink fluoridated waters at 0.7 mg/L fluoride, they will give birth to children who will have meaningfully lowered cognitive function.

    This means that most U.S. cities which fluoridate their water (0.7 mg/L) fall into that category.
    The U.S. Government’s recommended level is 0.7 milligrams of fluoride per liter of water.
    https://www.cdc.gov/fluoridation/faqs/public-service-recommendations.html

    The credibility of the study is beyond reproach…
    …a 12 year study
    …a multimillion dollar study subsidized by the U.S. National Institute of Health
    …prestigious institutions conducted the study (University of Toronto, University of Michigan, Indiana-Purdue University School of Dentistry, McGill University Montreal, Harvard, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, etc.)
    …starting with almost 1,000 mothers, the study rigidly qualified participants down to nearly 300 sets of mothers and children (testing the children twice).

    • Famous Fluoride activist, Dr. Paul Connett, has this video statement about the study.
      (3 1/2 minutes) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uSo32UTXiLQ
      He elaborates with a written statement…
      http://fluoridealert.org/articles/fluoride-exposure-in-utero-linked-to-lower-iq-in-kids-new-study-says/

      James Corbett again was ahead of the curve when in 2010, he interviewed Dr. Paul Connett in a podcast. https://www.corbettreport.com/interview-182-paul-connett/

      Excellent short 3 minute video about Fluoride by James Corbett…
      Violation of Consent: Fluoridation and Forced Medication
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ryRNbKiKj0Y&feature=youtu.be&t=33s

      • OK, I went to the store looking for a flouride free tooth paste. Easy peasy, right? Wrong.

        https://i.imgur.com/cjzOnv8.jpg

        Guess how many flouride free tooth pastes there are on this shelf? It’s not a very wide selection, but it’s nothing to sneeze at either.

        There is 1 (one) flouride free tooth paste on sale. It’s from a on homeland producer, they have also two flouride ridden formulas on sale. Flouride free is more than 2x as expensive than the other two. This one still contains various sulfates, I’ll have to find something better.

        There is another homeland produced tooth paste and that one doesn’t specify whether or not it contains flouride, but from the recommended usage text it does look like it does, since it mentions “other sources of flouride.”

        Most formulas contain 1450 ppm sodium flouride, some go to as low as 1100 ppm.

        What’s especially telling is that while all of these pastes have an ingredients list, most do not mention sodium flouride. Maybe that’s because of relatively low, almost trace amount concentration. Or maybe it’s because they are just goddamn assholes.

        Only some boast flouride content on the front of the package, I wish more of them would.

    • Worth noting…
      The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and other government agencies are well aware of the risks which Fluoride poses.

      In April 2015, the Department of Health and Human Services lowered the recommended water Fluoridation levels.
      This is significant.
      When “you read between the lines”, the government is trying to figure out how to gracefully back away from its pro-Fluoridation stance without losing credibility.
      Also of interest is the fact that the government did not use the “warmer climate needs less fluoride in the water” criteria which they previously were using. If they had applied the same criteria, it would expose just how wrong they are with the pro-fluoride stance; and southern states often would have no need to add fluoride because of the natural fluoride levels in the water.

      Here is the news about the Government’s 2015 change from the Harvard School which participated in this recent September 2017 study about Fluoride & pregnant mothers.
      https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/hsph-in-the-news/federal-government-calls-for-lowering-fluoride-levels-in-drinking-water/

      The above link is worth reading.

      Many risks about Fluoride are even stated in the CDC’s “Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry” (ATSDR)…
      (go lower on the webpage to the “red” Answer Sheet)… http://www.dogsagainstfluoridation.com/quiz

  2. I seem to remember that San Francisco stated that only citric acid filters could remove the chemical created by fluoride mixing with the other toxic sludges they put into the water. Me? I use a magnetic water filter by propur in my shower (where your bodies drink in more than your mouth) and a zerowater pitcher for drinking. Plus, I never drink just water alone. I heat it up for my coffee and teas. I also fill up the pitcher from the shower as I hope it makes the filter last longer. One filter lasts me about a month (it has a tester included with it) and it costs 45 bucks for a package of 2. I’m sure there is still sludge left in it, but it definitely cuts it down. If I drink fluorida water straight, I always wind up throwing up after about a week. Another thing I do is drink teas made from kelp and chlorella. They help absorb toxins in the body because their shells are supposed to absorb the toxins forever and ever and ever. Strange how today many cities advise us to boil city water, but I’ve never been sick from drinking water in the woods. I’ve even drunk unpurified water from fast moving streams without any noticeable effects. Only city water makes me sick. Thanks guv’ment!

    • Just a quick note “when drinking fluoridated water”.

      Try to have some food in your stomach, especially foods which are rich in calcium or perhaps magnesium.

      Fluorine (Fluoride) easily binds with calcium. By grabbing the fluoride in the gut with calcium, it helps to negate its ability to bind to bones in the body. Like you said, seaweed and chlorella help grab it and expel it.
      Example: When someone is poisoned by (HFS) Hydrofluorosilicic Acid sometimes they are given milk or something calcium rich.

      According the ATSDR, approximately half of the ingested fluoride will be expelled during one’s normal daily routines (depending).

    • Hola Pablo! I watched that video last night as well. I can’t believe how many people still believe that regulation is supposed to help the people. Even if you tell them how it really works, and what its’ purpose really is, they will still continue with their belief system that we need to regulate stuff. When they act in this manner, I always distance myself from them. I am nobody’s savior; if they wish to remain ignorant, I will let them. But this doesn’t mean I have to tolerate their presence. If they don’t wish to allow me to leave them alone, I become annoying enough so they no longer wish to have anything to do with me. You can’t fix stupid, but you can poke it with a stick. My life is my own, and I don’t wish to mess it up by associating with those who wish to remain willfully ignorant.

    • Pablito, Ironically, I also watched “The Cover Up at Times Beach” last night (Tejas time).
      The Dykes are good at telling a story and keeping your interest.

  3. PeaceFroggs,
    Thanks for the list.
    It shows the positive side of things. Points for the White Hats.

  4. That’s so funny! And right underneath your post is psychofrog saying how the canucks will stand up and repeal any laws like that. Don’t see it happening. AFter all, aren’t they represented by their government? The same people who just said FU to the people are going to now apologize nicely (well, they are Canadians and we all know how polite Canadians are) and then not do what they just did. Hilarious! Let the games begin!

  5. I haven’t been able to visit here lately… You may have seen this, but if not, go check out https://inpowermovement.com/
    These Liability contracts may be brilliant if it really works. Certainly would be the end of flouride, as well as a long list of other nasty things. I will try it on my smartmeter anyhow and see how it goes.

    • Mungjam,
      Thank you so much!
      This is Judo instruction for battling The Powers That Shouldn’t Be.
      (in 30 seconds or less) – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NtIYFCjUTSo&feature=youtu.be&t=6m3s

      The Judo approach can be applied on many different ‘venues’.

      For example: Back in the days of “mail in your bill payment”, I often would receive the telephone bill just a couple days prior to the due date. Despite rushing to the Post Office with payment, I would find out on the next bill that I owed late fees.
      Finally, with broiling smoke coming out my ears, I wrote a letter addressed to Execs at the phone company threatening a class action suit and notifying the State Attorney General, FCC, etc. (because I knew that the phone company had to be ‘scamming late fees’ with many thousands of its customers). In actuality, I probably would had never pursued a class action suit. But when threatening a bully, it is best to say how bloody you are going to bash their face in, utilizing every descriptive in the Dictionary of Gore.
      Anyway, it worked. The billing timeframe changed immediately.

      Another example(s).
      When I run across a company who I catch doing underhanded stuff with me, if first I can’t remedy it in a civil way, then I start talking to them posting bad reviews on YouTube, YELP, message boards, Facebook, etc.; sending government agencies complaint letters, etc. etc. I try to paint a really ugly PR disaster image.
      In fact, just last week I caught my ‘new electric service provider’ StarTex Power, who had promised lower rates in a scam. My net costs went up about 9% or 10%. They KNEW it was a scam, because after my tirade they quickly lowered my rates with a “pre-prepared contract alternative”. Their deception racket has this premise: “Most folks don’t follow up and compare”. It is a numbers game of subscribers who, unaware, will be paying higher rates forever. Pure profit. Do the math on the racket, and you will see what I am talking about.

      • The interesting thing is that this should work in any country in the world having corporate structures. Little did I know, my country (Canada) is actually registered as being a corporation located in Washington DC. The beginning of the clip is a little airy, but once you get through it’s quite a legal eye opener. Deception on a grand scale.

    • Already signed up for it, though I have yet to watch the first video. And yes, I checked all the blocks of interest! Thanks. Though I do have to admit, I have almost zero faith in our judicial system in Amerika, the publicity factor is a big deal with these people. Or things.

      • My take away is that this “Judo approach” does not need necessarily to be done within the legal system like the video mentions. It is an approach which can be used in many different areas.

        The video mentions “a contract”.
        And then a tacit agreement for a change in terms with the contract which they try to bully an individual into.

        My take-away is…
        With the internet and the public’s image of a ubiquitous lawsuits and onerous volumes of government regulations, there are many ways to scare bullies.
        No company wants the gooberment breathing down their books. No company wants a viral video about them. No company wants their name to be mud.
        Target Stores lost a lot of customers when they instituted the transgender restroom and social media responded with: “Boycott Target”.

      • Actually, I wasn’t warned. We live in a small town and we all have more guns and can use them better than the cops. They’re too busy eating doughnuts and harassing the homeless to mess with good ol boys.

        I read somewhere that the 13th Amendment actually put slavery into the constitution by allowing it for jails. Whether it did or not, it still works that way.

      • Quote
        …But one thing is clear: The devastation from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma on the ground will have deep and far-reaching financial consequences far beyond the disaster areas for years to come.

        • Pablo, it wasn’t the hurricane that they haven’t recovered from yet; it’s the government! Those *#$*EWT*#$*T*##*#** just try to rape every bit of dignity (and cash and property) from everyone they “help”.

        • The problem is that people sit and wait for the gubment to sort it out. Which makes sense, they’re paying 50% for not having to worry about it.

          Their minds have been completely compromised.

      • Humanity needs to be regulated.

  6. So right Pablito.
    Like you point out, fluoride ACCUMULATES in the soil, plants, water, animals and people.
    People and animals absorb around half of the fluoride ingested (depending on the circumstance).

    So, now most our foods have higher amounts of fluoride than they did 50 years ago.
    When drink manufacturers or food producers use water, the fluoride gets passed along into the final product. Example: Coke or Pepsi will always contain fluoride.

    Public water supply systems.
    Most rely upon a river sourced supply. However, the wastewater from a municipality is dumped back into the river for the next town. As cities along the river “add fluoride for the tap”, this additional fluoride gets flushed back into the river system.
    As the river rolls downstream, city after city, it ends up with more and more fluoride and a result of cities upstream.

  7. Dallas City Council – October 4, 2017 – FLUORIDE ACTIVISTS
    Regina Imburgia is rallying her troops to address the Dallas Mayor and City Council on Oct 4th at 9am. A person needs to call the City to get on the list to talk.

    Regina’s contact information is at this website
    http://www.dogsagainstfluoridation.com/
    (scroll down to see many videos of activists addressing the Dallas City Council)

    Regina’s FACEBOOK page
    https://www.facebook.com/events/1955862671301366/

    • Wow!
      …”Discovery (Channel)” backed way down being a large corporation depending upon the revenue of its advertisers….

  8. TSA “saw” Bitcoin in my bag and wanted to count it.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zsLwPCRv49Y

    A both sad and funny account of interaction with damn stupid TSA agents. Also an example of how “authority” doesn’t obey their own rules and induces fear in law abiding people.

  9. Related/unrelated – https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2017/09/amazon.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+NakedCapitalism+%28naked+capitalism%29

    Stumbled across that little comment derived anecdote this morning. Just like with Google, they accumulate all of this power under the guise of populist motives and then start to slowly phase out the little people (be that through co-opting with the NSA to silence you or shut down online book stores through automated avenues with no option to speak with a human to explain anything).

    Also see what are the top comments right now. Someone re-directs readers to AbeBooks.com to get away from Amazon…only to find out from another commenter that AbeBooks.com is owned by Amazon…

    It’s getting harder to find already established alternatives to the a-holes running the rackets. Just another tally mark on the list of reasons we all need to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps and continue to use current technology (like blockchain and open source ideas) to pave new ways to conduct commerce in ways that benefit us and help eliminate the a-holes. Keep on truckin’, as they say.

    • madmovond,
      Very interesting. I relate. I had buyers who would purchase from me to resell on Amazon.
      I used to own a large book operation (large retail stores, wholesale warehouse, online business). I owned about a million books circa 2001-2003.
      The Publishing Industry also is very tough for the small publishers.

      By the way, those library used book sales offer tremendous value.

      Some of the independent brick-n-mortar used book stores which have their own website online shopping cart might be able to survive. But it is still a strain.

      • Even the brick and mortar stores can only survive on the perceived need for physical books in their respective areas. If Amazon is able to undercut that need with cheap Kindle readers and e-books for less than a dollar then it seems there’s only one feasible outcome for the physical antiquity markets, unfortunately.

        But that reinforces, yet again, the need for all of those involved in those markets to band together and figure out ways to collectively support each other in direct defiance of the directed history the multi-billion dollar corporations are trying to feed us in favor of their products and profits with to due regard for what’s actually good for people. We have to direct our own history, and as all of us here surely agree, that is going to take some serious collaboration.

        I think my wife and I are going to put one of those take-one-leave-one mini libraries in our front yard at some point to take a small step in that direction. Maybe one day some kid will walk by and think to themselves, “what are these odd little things full of words that don’t have screens?”

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