"Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. Three times is enemy action." — Ian Fleming.
Got an upcoming camping trip with a circle based in Hino, none of whom are jabbed ... and I'm doing some education related work here with the local community around Noborito which includes a few unjabbed. But a quick query ver…
"Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. Three times is enemy action." — Ian Fleming.
Got an upcoming camping trip with a circle based in Hino, none of whom are jabbed ... and I'm doing some education related work here with the local community around Noborito which includes a few unjabbed. But a quick query verified that they knew nothing of the mass demonstration in Ikebukuro of the Japanese government's impending betrayal of bodily autonomy to the WHO. https://www.aussie17.com/p/developing-massive-rallies-break.
I marched on the Aussie embassy in my ''Arrest Fauci T-Shirt" back in Dec. of '21, and an anti-Phizer march in Shinjuku a month or so later (or was it before?) ... but hell, even I did not know about this anti-WHO rally — and it was a big one. My red-pilled Japanese friends who follow X (Twitter) Japan were also in the dark. Just wondering if you knew about it ... and if so, are able to share access to that pipeline.
Steve Martin, thanks for sharing this. (I hope you enjoy your camping trip!) I know exactly what you're talking about, how in the dark we all are, to at least some degree, with the censorship. And there are so many people, so many of their stories / reporting / actions I could say this about. Right now what's blinking on my radar, would that it could have much sooner, is the work of Hedley Rees.
And an apology for not keeping up with all you are doing. Now flooded with information and getting more involved with the local community.
Much thanks for the headsup about Hedley Rees. Just did a quick search, and found out I have free Kindle access to "TAMING THE BIG PHARMA MONSTER: By Speaking Truth to Power". Still haven't finished "What the Nurses Saw", but downloaded that book immediately.
Thanks for your note, Steve, and you know what, I don't think it's possible to keep up with what I'm doing, I can't keep up with it myself! (lol). I'm reading Hedley Rees right now, too. Very happy for you that you've found some local like-minded people.
I plan on starting a series of interviews of some of the brighter lights here in the local community. Kind of a present-tense version of your historic documentation.
P.S. For you, Steve, and for anyone else who might be doing interviews, I would imagine that you may encounter, even from those who talk tough in private, a strong reluctance to go on record. I thought what Avital Livny did for her interviews for her documentary "The Testimony Project" was both clever and very respectful of her interview subjects' concerns. Livny said in an interview about it in 2022, "no wonder people were afraid for their jobs, of what their colleagues and friends would say, and they didn't want to come out with their stories. So in order to give them a sense of confidence and safety, I gave them my word that I will not publish anything before I have at least 40 testimonies."
Great advice T. Will follow up on those links shortly.
I was thinking of going anonymous under a separately registered substack under a pseudonym, and for the safety of both myself and the interviewee, am thinking about a recorded voice version, but no faces.
Will have to do some serious thinking about how to appeal to a Western audience with interviews mostly limited to my modest Japanese skills. Maybe the original audio transcript, followed by a translated audio dialogue using cloned voices from ElevenLabs?
One problem with cat-and-mouse advances in A.I. ... I can imagine a lot of platforms being flooded with digitally cloned and twisted versions of projects conceived in good faith. Meh, I guess that has always been the way of "nothing personal — just business".
Just a thought-- of course only you will know what is right for you to do-- I would suggest compiling your interviews for a book along the lines of George Plimpton or Studs Terkel, that is to say, an oral history. This can be done whether the subject wishes to identify himself or not. It has nothing to do with covid, really, but I think Plimpton and Jean Stein's EDIE is a superb example of that genre.
That's not what I am doing-- my focus is simply selecting and making transcripts of videos, or excerpts therefrom, to be shared now but, primarily, to be preserved in an archive (more than one archive, and yes, they are printed out on paper already). I am merely the transcriber, not the journalist or historian conducting the interviews, so it probably isn't going to work in my lifetime to turn this material into a book. The permissions would be nightmare. And I knew that when I started.
But certainly if you make clear what you are doing upfront, conducting interviews for publication, there's no reason why you can't do a book of your collected intervews. I would also encourage you to think not only in the short term but in the medium and the long, and even very long term. Books are an unparalleled time and physical space traveling technology, as you know. What is to us the future will matter a lot to the people who end up living in it.
I hear you about the AI. That's a very valid concern.
I still vaguely remember George Plimpton's face, but Studs Terkel is a name I will not soon forget. Reminds me of street-philosopher Eric Hoffer.
Great suggestion! Yes. Books are time machines. And though the A.I. generated fluff is causing chaos in the market, self-publishing is easier than ever.
As I am writing this, I am exchanging messages with two counterparts (Japanese and Argentinian) helping to start an alternative school ... and out of habit, record our face-to-face meetings for us to go back and muse over. That's a good start already. A 3 hour introductory breakfast chat yesterday ... now mutually decided to be weekly, additional projects involving slightly different alternative-supplemental schools popping up, and then the community counselors lending a helping hand to mothers struggling with their kids, the elderly struggling with health and loneliness, and so on. Without the community volunteers and activism, the infrastructure of Japan would be a daintely wrapped nothing box. A Kafkaesque, bureaucratic maze, navigable only by those who are not yet living at the edge.
Now to get these things into communicable form, and then stand out from the for-profit look-alikes to come.
Hi Guy Gin (and tonic).
"Once is an accident. Twice is a coincidence. Three times is enemy action." — Ian Fleming.
Got an upcoming camping trip with a circle based in Hino, none of whom are jabbed ... and I'm doing some education related work here with the local community around Noborito which includes a few unjabbed. But a quick query verified that they knew nothing of the mass demonstration in Ikebukuro of the Japanese government's impending betrayal of bodily autonomy to the WHO. https://www.aussie17.com/p/developing-massive-rallies-break.
I marched on the Aussie embassy in my ''Arrest Fauci T-Shirt" back in Dec. of '21, and an anti-Phizer march in Shinjuku a month or so later (or was it before?) ... but hell, even I did not know about this anti-WHO rally — and it was a big one. My red-pilled Japanese friends who follow X (Twitter) Japan were also in the dark. Just wondering if you knew about it ... and if so, are able to share access to that pipeline.
Cheers.
Steve Martin, thanks for sharing this. (I hope you enjoy your camping trip!) I know exactly what you're talking about, how in the dark we all are, to at least some degree, with the censorship. And there are so many people, so many of their stories / reporting / actions I could say this about. Right now what's blinking on my radar, would that it could have much sooner, is the work of Hedley Rees.
Hi Transcriber.
And an apology for not keeping up with all you are doing. Now flooded with information and getting more involved with the local community.
Much thanks for the headsup about Hedley Rees. Just did a quick search, and found out I have free Kindle access to "TAMING THE BIG PHARMA MONSTER: By Speaking Truth to Power". Still haven't finished "What the Nurses Saw", but downloaded that book immediately.
Cheers, and keep up the good fight.
Thanks for your note, Steve, and you know what, I don't think it's possible to keep up with what I'm doing, I can't keep up with it myself! (lol). I'm reading Hedley Rees right now, too. Very happy for you that you've found some local like-minded people.
😂.
Thanks for keeping in touch.
I plan on starting a series of interviews of some of the brighter lights here in the local community. Kind of a present-tense version of your historic documentation.
Cheers T!
P.S. For you, Steve, and for anyone else who might be doing interviews, I would imagine that you may encounter, even from those who talk tough in private, a strong reluctance to go on record. I thought what Avital Livny did for her interviews for her documentary "The Testimony Project" was both clever and very respectful of her interview subjects' concerns. Livny said in an interview about it in 2022, "no wonder people were afraid for their jobs, of what their colleagues and friends would say, and they didn't want to come out with their stories. So in order to give them a sense of confidence and safety, I gave them my word that I will not publish anything before I have at least 40 testimonies."
More here: The Testimonies Project (Israel)
https://www.vaxtestimonies.org/en/
Also, see:
Avital Livny Giving Evidence About Testimony Project In Israel To Grand Jury Day 6
February 26, 2022
Clip:
https://rumble.com/vw0vo1-avital-livny-giving-evidence-about-testimony-project-in-israel-to-grand-jur.html
[Source:
https://odysee.com/@GrandJury:f/Grand-Jury-Day-6-en-online:7 ]
Transcript of excerpt: https://transcriberb.dreamwidth.org/6167.html
Great advice T. Will follow up on those links shortly.
I was thinking of going anonymous under a separately registered substack under a pseudonym, and for the safety of both myself and the interviewee, am thinking about a recorded voice version, but no faces.
Will have to do some serious thinking about how to appeal to a Western audience with interviews mostly limited to my modest Japanese skills. Maybe the original audio transcript, followed by a translated audio dialogue using cloned voices from ElevenLabs?
One problem with cat-and-mouse advances in A.I. ... I can imagine a lot of platforms being flooded with digitally cloned and twisted versions of projects conceived in good faith. Meh, I guess that has always been the way of "nothing personal — just business".
Much thanks for the thoughtful consideration.
Cheers.
Just a thought-- of course only you will know what is right for you to do-- I would suggest compiling your interviews for a book along the lines of George Plimpton or Studs Terkel, that is to say, an oral history. This can be done whether the subject wishes to identify himself or not. It has nothing to do with covid, really, but I think Plimpton and Jean Stein's EDIE is a superb example of that genre.
That's not what I am doing-- my focus is simply selecting and making transcripts of videos, or excerpts therefrom, to be shared now but, primarily, to be preserved in an archive (more than one archive, and yes, they are printed out on paper already). I am merely the transcriber, not the journalist or historian conducting the interviews, so it probably isn't going to work in my lifetime to turn this material into a book. The permissions would be nightmare. And I knew that when I started.
But certainly if you make clear what you are doing upfront, conducting interviews for publication, there's no reason why you can't do a book of your collected intervews. I would also encourage you to think not only in the short term but in the medium and the long, and even very long term. Books are an unparalleled time and physical space traveling technology, as you know. What is to us the future will matter a lot to the people who end up living in it.
I hear you about the AI. That's a very valid concern.
I still vaguely remember George Plimpton's face, but Studs Terkel is a name I will not soon forget. Reminds me of street-philosopher Eric Hoffer.
Great suggestion! Yes. Books are time machines. And though the A.I. generated fluff is causing chaos in the market, self-publishing is easier than ever.
As I am writing this, I am exchanging messages with two counterparts (Japanese and Argentinian) helping to start an alternative school ... and out of habit, record our face-to-face meetings for us to go back and muse over. That's a good start already. A 3 hour introductory breakfast chat yesterday ... now mutually decided to be weekly, additional projects involving slightly different alternative-supplemental schools popping up, and then the community counselors lending a helping hand to mothers struggling with their kids, the elderly struggling with health and loneliness, and so on. Without the community volunteers and activism, the infrastructure of Japan would be a daintely wrapped nothing box. A Kafkaesque, bureaucratic maze, navigable only by those who are not yet living at the edge.
Now to get these things into communicable form, and then stand out from the for-profit look-alikes to come.
Cheers T!
You are an inspiration.
Good wishes, I think that will be a tremendous contribution.