…to take Life on Earth to the Second Birth and the Man will be in command…
…to take Life on Earth to the Second Birth and the Man will be in command…
Lucy Spraggan, the 21-year-old singer/songwriter from Sheffield – I have to admit that I’ve been rooting for her since the minute I came across her X Factor audition video on YouTube. I haven’t been rooting for her to win the popularity contest that shapes young people to become a tool of the Zionist-controlled entertainment industry; I wished that whatever would happen to make her pull out of the big mistake that she made by entering the competition. Someone that pure simply shouldn’t be fed to the greedy moguls.
I’ve followed her through the first weeks of the UK’s so-called talent show and she didn’t cease to amaze me. Contrary to fellow contestants such as Jade Ellis who was turned into a look-a-like of Illuminati princess Rihanna before being voted off, Spraggan stayed true to her own look, music, guitar and most of all to her simply brilliant and brilliantly simple lyrics. Subsequently, during the 4th week of the live shows, it was announced that she was ordered to pull out of that week’s show on doctor’s orders over ill health. She was given a free pass straight to the next live shows, but when they arrived it turned out that she was forced to pull out of the X Factor for health reasons as per November 4. Continue reading
October 12, 2012 – On Friday Dutch cameraman Roel Rekko was announced the winner of the Stan Storimans Prize 2012, a prize for cameramen of news programs. Rekko received the award for a documentary he made in Damascus during the funeral of Syrian Defense Minister Daoud Rajha who was killed by a terrorist suicide bomb on July 18.
Despite its length of less than two minutes, the jury considered the report to be “very layered” and therefore worth the prize named after Dutch cameraman Stan Storimans who died in an airstrike on the Georgian city of Gori during the 2008 South Ossetia War. Continue reading
October 3, 2012 – “It is all orchestrated by the U.S. and Turkey”, he says. “They are behind this chaos. World War III already started, people just don’t recognize it. It’s no longer soldiers of one country fighting soldiers of an other country you know.”
“Indeed”, I say, pleasantly surprised. This middle-aged Turkish man next to me on the train in a West-European country isn’t supposed to have an opinion like that. “Nowadays’ wars are fought by foreign mercenaries and supported by many youth and many ignorant that have been brought into the streets to act in fake, corporate-fascist financed ‘revolutions’. Those people have been duped into believing in the sincerity of those fake revolutions by the Zionist and imperialist powers, don’t you think so too?”
The Turkish man, I forgot his exact name but it sounded like Ishafin, nodds at me. “And now that bitch gave them another 45 million dollars!”
I giggle a bit about the word bitch, I know exactly who he means. “Hitlery, Killery“, I say conspiratorial. Continue reading
June 1, 2012 – This year’s Cannes Film Festival, held between May 16 and May 27, has added a documentary essay on last year’s U.S.-European war against Libya to its official selection. The selection for the 65th film marathon on Cote d’Azur was already made in April, but the organizers decided last minute that the documentary “The Oath of Tobruk” (“Le Serment de Tobrouk”) by French reporter and philosopher Bernard-Henri Lévy should be added and receive a special screening.
The French-languaged documentary which is co-produced by the French-German culture channel Arte, has been filmed during the entire eight months of the criminal NATO attack on the soevereign country and focusses on the support the Libyan Al Qaeda-rebels (called “revolutionaries” in the documentary) received from France, the U.S. and the U.K. Lévy also shot parts of the film in Paris, New York and London to show “how the determination of the rebels altered the course of history in their country”.
“The selection of The Oath of Tobruk reminds us that a film can represent a passing of the torch between people inspired by a shared love of freedom,” says the festival’s statement. Continue reading