16 Comments
Aug 24Liked by Suzanne O'Keeffe

Just goes to show you, if it can happen to George Washington, it can happen to anybody…

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Yes! I’m glad that came through!

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Great essay!

I have a lot of relatives who still cannot admit how badly they were pfooled by Pfauci and Pfizer.

I understand. It would be really painful for them to admit the truth. But they should do it anyway, for their own self-respect and eventual healing.

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Thank you patrick! Me too. It's not even spoken about. And yes, the blindness is damaging in itself, let alone allowing the betrayal to continue and the institutions and heroes to continue to operate. I do believe, though, as more folks find the courage to look at their feelings and step toward healing, it will become easier and easier for others to find their way to it. There's so much. But as I said, we are hardwired to detect cheats and once we fire back up that inner program, perhaps we'll never be deceived by any of these globalist puppets ever again.

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Well done, Suzanne!

"Betrayal Blindness" is the perfect name for what is going on for a lot of people.

Have you ever noticed, when letting a friend know about someone who has betrayed them (such as telling them that they have a cheating spouse) that the betrayed one actually attacks the person who tells them? It's part of the blindness and that's how deep it goes.

So here we have it "writ large".

When people start to catch on to what has been done to them, get ready for the blowback!

But keep on keepin' on, Suzanne!

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So true! Yes it’s all the other fears - of losing self image, emotional or financial support - triggering a defense to keep the blindness the person thinks he or she needs to survive. The cabal has conditioned us to react this way so we don’t see through their schemes, see the betrayal and ditch them all.

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Aug 28Liked by Suzanne O'Keeffe

Many good points raised in this article, well done!!!

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thank you so much Garth!

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Aug 27Liked by Suzanne O'Keeffe

Points 4b and 6b in particular!

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I know! Once you see it, you can't unsee it. In this psyop world we're in, questioning anything of anyone demands attack. We've got to undo this conditioning.

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I haven't read it all, and I might - but the images are provocative - and I like that.

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I love good visuals. Thanks!

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I've read more and this is good stuff - good history with a twist of fate - have you read about how Jackson proclaimed against the concept of "nullification" put forth by his Vice President who later chose to resign?

If not here is a link associated with that - and tis my sentiment that the DNC is toast.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nullification_crisis

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It must of been difficult for Washington to realize a previously trusted associate was a traitor to the cause, but one wonders whether Washington was fully aware of the federal ambitions of Hamilton and his (Hamilton's) desire to increase federal authority - but in the midst of war Hamilton served with honor best I know - it was only later he whispered in Washington's ear to implement the "Whiskey Tax" as a federal tool to acquire funds to pay war debts - like a stab in the heart that must of been for the folks living in the hills who helped win the fight to fend of unfair taxes from King George of England - only to then be taxed by their home country they helped establish.

Remember the Waxhaws I say and in Cowpens there was a double envelopment per the genius of Morgan out of Jersey and Washington's first cousin once removed on horseback when they gave pompous Benny Tarleton a devil of a whipping.

Small world ain't it?

I think history is fixing to repeat.

https://buffaloken.substack.com/p/the-battle-of-cowpens

I also think some of the historical tidbits your present here are truly of merit.

Regards,

BK

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Thank you BK! The Revolutionary War and its aftermath is a fascinating period of time for me. I’m not familiar yet with the nullification crisis you mention but I’ll definitely check those links! I’m of the opinion that Hamilton’s bank is what allowed the new country to survive. The new United States was bankrupt and couldn’t pay its soldiers and the states had no way to repay their debts. It was about to be reabsorbed into the City of London empire. The bank was a brilliant and important solution. But I think he had to make many compromises to it that weakened it. I’m likely to write about that in a future post. IMO he was shot on purpose by the founder of Wall Street Aaron Burr on a mission from the City of London bankers. The dualing pistols and a famous painting of the duel are on display at the JPMorgan headquarters I believe. 🤔 Looking forward to reading your links!

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That is interesting and might be the case.....I watched an episode of "Drunk History" (I'm aware that is not an "authoritative" source - ha, ha) that went over the Burr/Hamilton duel. I agree that period of history was truly an exciting time - maybe just like these days seem to be shaping up to be.

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I just think for the folks in the hills, the "Whiskey Tax" was a slap in the face.....and Hamilton/Washington should have exempted the small-scale producers, but turns out Washington was a large scale producer himself so he may have been biased or willing to do it in his own self interest (he had a large distilling operation). Plus, I think Hamilton had sort of gotten into Washington's head, but that is just speculation.....

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Looking forward to reading future articles.

BK

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Drunk history lol! I’ll have to track that episode down. Agreed definitely on the Whiskey Tax. I think they were scrambling to figure out how to solve the income v debt problem.

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