homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Dr. Russell Blaylock about "The Rockefellers & Social engineering"

The term “social engineering” is often misunderstood; what it refers to is the act of manipulating people (or masses of people) into doing whatever it is that you want. The term is not quite similar to a people trick or a people fraud, and it’s often about making people divulge information. Russell Blaylock, M.D is […]

Mihai Andrei
January 8, 2009 @ 10:02 am

share Share

The term “social engineering” is often misunderstood; what it refers to is the act of manipulating people (or masses of people) into doing whatever it is that you want. The term is not quite similar to a people trick or a people fraud, and it’s often about making people divulge information.

Russell Blaylock, M.D is a retired neurosurgeon, and according to everything I’ve read about him, he was really good, and understood a lot of things that most weren’t so interested in. He wrote several articles and a few books, tackling many subjects related mostly to degenerative diseases.

So what to the Rockefellers, social engineering, a neurosurgeon and food additives have in common?? The videos we’re presenting you here. Really interesting stuff, though I think it’s a bit of a conspiracy theory. However, if you listen carefully, I’m sure you’ll be able to delimitate what’s true from what could be true.
P.S.
This is the world we live in.

share Share

These Wild Tomatoes Are Reversing Millions of Years of Evolution

Galápagos tomatoes resurrect ancient defenses, challenging assumptions about evolution's one-way path.

No Mercury, No Cyanide: This is the Safest and Greenest Way to Recover Gold from E-waste

A pool cleaner and a spongy polymer can turn used and discarded electronic items into a treasure trove of gold.

Scientists uncover anti-aging "glue" that naturally repairs damaged DNA

Researchers have newly found a very important function for a well-known enzyme.

Why Bats Don’t Get Cancer—And What That Could Mean for Us

Bats can live up to 40 years without developing cancer. Scientists now know why.

Fish Feel Intense Pain For 20 Minutes After Catch — So Why Are We Letting Them Suffocate?

Brutal and mostly invisible, the way we kill fish involves prolonged suffering.

Revolutionary single-dose cholesterol treatment could reduce levels by up to 69%

If confirmed, this could be useful for billilons of people.

Iron Deficiency Can Flip The Genetic Switch That Determines Sex, Turning Male Embryos into Female

Researchers show maternal iron levels can override genetic sex determination in mice.

Scientists Invented a Way to Store Data in Plastic Molecules and It Could Someday Replace Hard Drives

What if your next hard drive wasn’t a box, but a string of molecules? Synthetic polymers promises to revolutionize data storage.

Taking Vitamin D Daily Might Actually Slow Down Aging at the Cellular Level

A new clinical trial suggests vitamin D slows cellular aging by preserving telomere length.

This Baby’s One-in-a-Million Genetic Disorder Had No Cure. So Scientists Designed One Just for Him

The first personalized CRISPR therapy saved a child’s life. Can it save others too?