Epstein Files:
Eva Dubin:
Mary Kennedy found dead in her backyard…
Epstein:
Whoops
Mary Kennedy was the former wife of RFK Jr, who died of suicide hanging in their barn — but there were details about how she died that caused suspicion. Apparently there were bruises on her fingers..

Let me walk you through what goes into your "plant-based" burger that's supposedly better for the environment than beef.
Soy protein isolate: Soybeans grown in industrial monoculture, shipped to processing facility, hexane extraction to remove oil, chemical processing to isolate protein, drying, milling. Energy intensive, chemical intensive, creates industrial waste.
Coconut oil: Grown in plantations created by clearing tropical forest, possibly harvested by enslaved monkeys, shipped across oceans, refined through chemical processing.
Sunflower oil: Monoculture crop requiring pesticides, mechanical extraction, chemical refining, more industrial waste.
Heme from genetically modified yeast: Grown in industrial fermentation tanks, requires sugar feedstock, energy-intensive bioreactors, purification process, creates significant waste stream.
Methylcellulose: Derived from wood pulp through chemical processing with methyl chloride and caustic soda.
Add: food starch, maltodextrin, natural flavors (chemical compounds), salt, dextrose, and about 15 other processed ingredients.
The environmental footprint of manufacturing this product requires:
- Industrial soy monoculture
- Multiple chemical processing facilities
- Fermentation infrastructure for GMO yeast
- Global shipping for multiple ingredients
- Packaging in plastic
- Refrigerated transport and storage
Compare to beef: Grass grows. Cow eats grass. You eat cow. Three steps. Zero processing. No industrial facilities. No chemical extraction. No genetic modification. No global ingredient shipping.
But the Impossible Burger is marketed as better for the environment because they calculated the cow's methane and ignored the entire industrial supply chain required to manufacture their product.
Your "sustainable" plant burger required more processing steps, more energy input, more chemical usage, and more global transport than beef.
It's just that nobody calculated those parts.
"Just soak your beans overnight to reduce phytic acid!"
"Sprout your grains to lower lectins!"
"Ferment your legumes to improve digestibility!"
"Boil your vegetables to reduce oxalates!"
OR
Eat beef, which contains zero antinutrients and requires zero preparation to be perfectly bioavailable.
You're spending hours detoxifying plants to make them barely edible while beef just exists as perfect nutrition.
The cow already did the soaking, sprouting, fermenting for you. It's called digestion. You're just eating the finished product.
Problems fiber solves:
- None
Problems fiber causes:
- Bloating
- Gas
- Constipation (the irony)
- Gut irritation
- Mineral malabsorption
- Digestive distress
Problems fiber claims to solve that are actually caused by the diet requiring fiber:
- All of them
Remove the fiber. Remove the problems. It's not complicated.
"When enough people understand reality, tyrants can literally be ignored out of existence. They can't ever be voted out of existence." - Larken Rose
Dionysiokolakes (or Dionysiokolax) is a venomous term coined by the ancient philosopher Epicurus to insult Plato and his followers, translating to "flatterers of Dionysius" or "flatterers of Dionysus". It literally means "tyrant's sycophants" and implies that Plato and his followers were performative actors lacking sincerity.
Dionysiokolakes applies perfectly to modern expert class.
🇺🇸 A country that touts “democracy and freedom” bombed eight nations in under a year, kidnapped foreign presidents, seized oil fields, threatened to occupy Greenland and Canada, and tried to rewrite the map of the entire Western Hemisphere.
And inside that same “free world” nation, ICE killed U.S. citizens, including unarmed mothers and ICU nurses, and blinded peaceful student protesters, all under the banner of “rule of law.”
🇨🇺 But Cuba, the country they call a “dictatorship,” survived sixty years of U.S. blockade, faced medicine shortages even during a pandemic, and still sent doctors around the world to save lives.
One system performs human rights as a slogan.
The other practices it as a duty.