The problem with most people is that they think in a very linear fashion and believe what they are told, even if their eyes tell the opposite. The obvious two examples of direct evidence to the contrary would be JFK being shot from behind or building 7 collapsing because of fires. People will believe these things even though looking at the video evidence obviously tells a different story. It is a kind of magic in a way, the illusion can be pushed no matter how evidently wrong it is. The hoaxes get worse and worse as the years go by and people believe all kinds of things even though there is no evidence. The more irrational the better it seems, nobody needs to present any evidence at all, people will just believe what they are told to them. Once a person sees through one lie, the scales usually start to fall from their eyes and the other lies become obvious. Unfortunately, things are largely moving in the opposite direction, most people have to lie to themselves and choose to believe more and more irrational claims to protect themselves psychologically from the obvious fact that those in power are criminally insane. This contradiction of course leads to deep psychological problems because even though the conscious mind can trick itself the subconscious still knows the truth. Eventually the will lead to a psychic break because the personality is no longer whole. This is why most Covid believers seem so close to have psychological breakdowns because they are in actual fact very close to having such a break. Their subconscious and conscious mind are actually at war with each other, and a break is the only solution for the mind in such a dilemma. It is important to remember how dangerous these people are and how at any moment they can completely loose it. It is best to avoid these people by any means necessary. They may even seem “alright” on the outside but this is mere desperate cover for the deep psychosis on the inside that is liable to break out at any moment. Your own personal safety can not be stressed enough about these people.
All that being said, what I am trying to get at is the world is not what most people think it is. It is not the world we learn in our history books or what we see on TV. Actually, to learn what is truly going in the world it takes both effort and curiosity. Since most people don’t even have one of these qualities, let alone both, the masses are perpetually in hopeless ignorance about the true nature of the world around them. For those who truly understand what is going on, the world seems to run by Intelligence agencies and most likely numerous secret societies. It is somewhat unclear who wields true power because these organizations by their very nature are secret. What is very obvious is that what were are shown on TV as having power is an absolute joke. Republican vs Demarcate, and other silly tribal political games that elites allow the masses to watch and vote on are merely bread and circuses for the dim witted plebs. True power rests behind the scenes by evidence of the fact that voting never changes a damn thing and whatever the “globalists” want they get.
This world of illusion continues to our wars. It seems like wherever America fights a war drug production goes up. This was true in Vietnam and this was true in Afghanistan. CIA drug trade has to continue. These are huge black budgets. Once fentanyl was invented, there was really no more reason for opium growing fields in Afghanistan. So naturally the U.S. government let the Kabul government fall.
The true history of the CIA drug trade is fascinating and is a must watch.
And a read list here
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Literary Fiction
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by Samantha Harvey
(Cape £14.99, 144 pp)
One of our most consistently surprising novelists rips
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six astronauts circling Earth on the International Space Station. A boldly imaginative meditation on time and the nature of existence.
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by Richard T. Kelly
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SET in Scotland between the 1950s and 1980s, this pacy panorama of politics and petroleum follows five men whose paths are shaped by the discovery of North Sea
oil. Kelly’s eye for the nitty-gritty of life on the
rigs is among the thrills of this action-packed
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L-R: ORBITAL by Samantha Harvey (Cape £14.99, 144
pp); THE BLACK EDEN by Richard T. Kelly (Faber £20,
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by Megan Barker
(Cheerio £12.99, 160 pp)
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Fall head-over-heels this Christmas with this beautiful tale of swooning first love.
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L-R: BIOGRAPHY OF X by Catherine Lacey (Granta £18.99, 416 pp); ABSOLUTELY AND FOREVER by Rose Tremain (Chatto & Windus £16.99, 192pp)
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by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah
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(Canongate £16.99, 256 pp)
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The masterful Grenville addresses the question of why this brilliant, frustrated woman struggled to express love to her children with clarity and compassion in a swift, thoroughly absorbing book.
L-R: CHAIN-GANG ALL-STARS by Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah (Harvill Secker £18.99,
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and emotionally intimate, it viscerally describes the violence of conflict while beautifully capturing the brave hopefulness of the
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by Costanza Casati
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L-R: IN MEMORIAM by Alice Winn (Viking £14.99, 400pp); CLYTEMNESTRA by Costanza Casati (Michael Joseph £16.99, 480 pp);
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(Michael Joseph £16.99, 400 pp)
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L-R: TACKLE! by Jilly Cooper (Bantam £22, 448 pp); OVER SHARING by
Jane Fallon (Michael Joseph £16.99, 400 pp); GOOD MATERIAL by Dolly Alderton (Fig Tree £18.99,
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I devoured this Hollywood thriller, whose heroine Mae is in ‘black bag’ PR.
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Teen actor deaths, bent politicians, sex, drugs, murder.
Mae never judges — until someone she loves is killed.
I turned the pages so fast my hands were a blur.
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by Maud Ventura
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You’ve got to love a novel about posh French people.
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L-R: EVERYBODY KNOWS by Jordan Harper (Faber & Faber £8.99, 416
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L-R: CALL FOR THE DEAD by John le Carré (Penguin £9.99, 176 pp);
A CHATEAU UNDER SEIGE by Martin Walker (Quercus £22,
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by E.C.R. Lorac
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Lichens, tiny insects, solitary reading, train journeys, overheard conversations, dissolving friendships and matrimonial irritations make
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showcased in these 144 offbeat, funny, occasionally sad, but drolly observant tales.
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by Katherine Heiny
(4th Estate £16.99, 240 pp)
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L-R: OUR STRANGERS by Lydia Davis (Canongate £20, 368 pp); OUR STRANGERS by
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RESURRECTION WALK
by Michael Connelly (Orion £22, 416pp)
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THE WATCHMAKER’S HAND
by Jeffery Deaver (HarperCollins £22, 464pp)
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lurking in the shadows trying to kill him. The master-plotter Deaver cranks up the tension to fever
pitch.
Resurrection Walk by Michael Connelly (Orion £22, 416pp) and The Watchmaker’s Hand by Jeffery Deaver (HarperCollins £22, 464pp)
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by Stephen King (Hodder & Stoughton £25, 448pp)
First appearing in King’s Mr Mercedes in 2014, Holly
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Horror lurks in plain sight.
THE CHRISTMAS JIGSAW MURDERS
by Alexandra Benedict (Simon & Schuster £14.99, 352pp)
When a set of jigsaw pieces are left on her doorstep,
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Edie O’Sullivan overcomes her loathing of Christmas to
piece together a mystery, insisting that she solves the puzzle before more people die.
It’s Agatha Christie on acid, deliciously nasty and fun.
Holly by Stephen King (Hodder & Stoughton £25, 448pp) and The Christmas
Jigsaw Murders by Alexandra Benedict (Simon & Schuster £14.99, 352pp)
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by Celia Walden (Sphere £20, 320pp)
Computer adviser Colette services the needs of the wealthy residents in a desirable West London square and discovers their secrets — knowledge which helps when a new arrival is killed in the square gardens.
Taut, twisty and thrilling, it proves conclusively that journalist
Walden has a great future in crime.
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by Val McDermid (Sphere £22, 464pp)
Two crime writers, one established the other less
so, play chess with one another and often discuss the perfect murder.
When the more successful one dies he leaves behind a manuscript that outlines their
plan. So begins this elegant story from McDermid,
who richly deserves the title of queen of crime.
L-R: THE SQUARE by Celia Walden (Sphere £20, 320pp); PAST
LYING by Val McDermid (Sphere £22, 464pp); EYE FOR AN EYE by
M. J. Arlidge (Orion £14.99, 544pp)
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by M. J. Arlidge (Orion £14.99, 544pp)
What would happen if the true identity of notorious convicted criminals
granted ‘lifetime anonymity orders’ were to be
leaked to the Press? Would that encourage a lynch mob, or would it be natural justice?
Arlidge asks this tense moral question in a story that opens with a sex
offender being killed.
Sci-fi and Fantasy
Jamie Buxton
IRON FLAME
by Rebecca Yarros (Piatkus £22, 640pp)
After the massive reset at the end of Fourth Wing, Violet (aka Violence) Sorrengail is still flying high
on her mighty — and mightily sarcastic — dragon. But fear not,
levels of fighting, rebelliousness and all-round sexiness are still sky-high, though now an age-old enemy is testing traditional loyalties.
SUMMER FISHING IN LAPLAND
by Juhani Karila (Pushkin £12.99, 352pp)
I loved this off-kilter tale of myth and mundanity — a deep dive into
a morass of Finnish folklore and small-town life. A coming-home story and a comingto-terms story of grief and monsters, as Elina must
face down old transgressions to catch a pike and save a life.
Iron Flame by Rebecca Yarros (Piatkus £22,
640pp) and Summer Fishing in Lapland by Juhani Karila (Pushkin £12.99, 352pp)
INFINITY GATE
by M.R. Carey (Orbit £18.99, 512pp)
A bona-fide sci-fi blockbuster where AI and quantum-leaping have combined to
create a lethal, cosmic mess. Caught up in the mayhem are a Nigerian sex-worker, a disembodied
scientific genius and a clever rabbit — because in an infinite universe,
anything is possible. Huge complexity, awesome story-telling,
utterly gripping.
INK BLOOD SISTER SCRIBE
by Emma Törzs (Century £16.99, 416pp)
Here be blood magic, secret libraries, a major, magical conspiracy and
sisters, one with powers that put her family’s life at risk.
This is a scorchingly good debut with a grand geographic sweep, an excellent variation on spell-casting, hugely satisfying family
dynamics and surprisingly gory episodes of quite squirm-inducing efficacy.
L-R: INFINITY GATE by M.R. Carey (Orbit £18.99, 512pp); INK BLOOD SISTER
SCRIBE by Emma Törzs (Century £16.99, 416pp)
Debuts
Sara Lawrence
WEIRDO
by Sara Pascoe (Faber £14.99, 368pp)
Hilarious and heart-breaking, this stars Sophie who works in a pub and Chris who likes to
drink in them. He turns up in Sophie’s bar and she can’t believe her eyes — they’ve got serious history but he doesn’t seem to recognise her.
Sophie’s internal monologue is juxtaposed against the reality of what’s happening.
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PLAYING GAMES
by Huma Qureshi (Sceptre £16.99, 320pp)
Ever since their mother died, youngest sister Mira has
taken up a lot of eldest Hana’s headspace. Mira struggles
financially and has no inspiration for the play she’s planning.
Hana’s life appears sorted, but she’s having
a hard time privately. Mira overhears Hana arguing and starts writing.
It’s brilliant on siblings, secrets and storytelling itself.
L-R: WEIRDO by Sara Pascoe (Faber £14.99, 368pp); PLAYING GAMES by Huma
Qureshi (Sceptre £16.99, 320pp); SOMETHING BLUE
by Alex Sarkis (Ultimo Press £14.99, 352pp)
SOMETHING BLUE
by Alex Sarkis (Ultimo Press £14.99, 352pp)
Set in Sydney’s diverse Western suburbs, this
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