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There is an interesting parellel with '1984' - the
LibLabCon instruction manual - which I shall reveal
shortly, but when I read in yesterday's Daily Mail that
there was panic
buying of 100 watt light bulbs, I hit the shops
late in the day to try and stockpile one of my favourite
inventions before the treacherous government allows
the EU to deny me the right to buy them forever more.
I visited the large hardware shop in town - we are
fortunate still to have one - and bought the last packet
of ten 100 watt bulbs, although they hardly had any
40 or 60s either. The checkout girl said there had been
no mass bulb-buying exercise and was surprised by the
Mail's article. She had also not heard that the compact
fluorescent bulbs which they stock of course, and that
we are now expected to fill our homes with, can be dangerous.
I wrote about the dangers
three months ago. The report
of the hazards of broken compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs)
and cleanup concerns from The Maine Department of Environmental
Protection is frightening. Mercury is toxic and can
be extremely difficult to completely remove.
The similarity with '1984' concerns the shortage of
razor blades in the novel. Propaganda
Matrix writer Paul Joseph Watson explains:
"A startling parallel can be drawn from George
Orwell's dystopian classic, 1984, in which a black market
for sharp razor blades emerged after The Party ensured
that shops only provided blunt ones to prevent the proles
from slashing their wrists. Now the proles of 2009 Airstrip
One are busy buying up the remaining stock of the traditional
light bulb.
From the book,
Everyone kept asking you for razor blades. Actually
he had two unused ones which he was hoarding up. There
had been a famine of them for months past. At any given
moment there was some necessary article which the Party
shops were unable to supply. Sometimes it was buttons,
sometimes it was darning wool, sometimes it was shoelaces;
at present it was razor blades. You could only get hold
of them, if at all, by scrounging more or less furtively
on the 'free' market.
'I wanted to ask you whether you'd got any razor
blades,' he said. 'Not one!' said Winston with a sort
of guilty haste. 'I've tried all over the place. They
don't exist any longer.'
"100 watt light bulbs will cease to exist on the
open market in the UK within weeks and they will be
followed by all incandescent light bulbs within three
years as the genius of Thomas Edison 140 years ago that
marked one of mankind's greatest achievements is made
obsolete by world government regulation."
Watson is right. The Mail
article shows how the world's governments are following
the same orders basically, by banning incandescent filament
bulbs all over Europe and the English-speaking world,
as well as South America.
In Britain we are being increasingly told what to do
by people with no right to demand anything of us. They
seek to change our beliefs, make us watch what we say
and get us playing silly games to pretend it is necessary
for our future survival. As if the distribution of billions
of disposable mercury-filled glass tubes will be good
for the planet. Globalist control freaks: you're busted
again!
Comments can be left on my
blog.
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