Eric Pepin - Higher Balance Institute - Discussion

Wow! I didn't know that magnetite was implicated in such serious health issues! And to think, Jeff Rense is still advertising this stuff! And how many others are possibly putting their health in danger? Lord! What if their so-called "psychic experiences" are just symptoms of brain pathology?

A lot to think about. Thanks!
 
This explains a lot on magnetite! Thanks christx11!

As the C's said:
What better deception than to divert the meaning of alchemy, by focusing upon substance, then addicting those souls bound to 3rd density to the substance?
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

Honestly Laura, I can’t describe what a positive light you brought to the discussion at DU, and I really think that a lot of people are going to want to learn more.

As well, I would like to thank Huron and Seeker100 who both stepped in and made some very positive comments about you and sott. I have no doubt that through all of your responses Fulcanelli managed to get his horns a little banged up, I would also like to think that maybe he had to run off with his tail between his legs and go rouse Stormbear out from under his rock. And by the time his venomous attack showed up I was feeling a little creative and was ready for some fun…

I know you (Laura) read my comment to Strombear and responded with some quotes from Lobaczewski, and yes, thank you for doing that. I read Ponerology but do lack the experience of connecting such individuals to their pathological condition. Even though I have had the unfortunate experience of having to deal with people like that in my own life, I really didn’t properly connect the dots until you pointed it out and put it together for me, once again thanks.

I think all the replies and links provided were appreciated by all the DU members who found the Ponerology discussion fascinating. Time for change (Tfc) put together an incredible presentation, and then the unexpected happened, a deviant showed up to crash the party, and then the Calvary showed up to save the day. Nope the one thing that wasn’t expected or planed for was the array of guest speakers, but fortunately it all worked out for the best, it turned out to be a great party, and people are still reading and commenting on it. Hopefully sott will be getting a big influx of visitors and we can keep adding to this story...
Larry
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

Well, you are about to see the legendary "persistence" of the pathological deviance over there. Dollars to donuts, Vinnie, StormBear, Jay and Andy will take over the whole thread and it will be nothing but "about me" and forget the real issue!

So, I've said what there is to say, better copy it if you want it saved.
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

Laura said:
Larry, I hope I'm helping out. [..]No matter who it is or where it is, when my name is mentioned, the Bridges gang finds it and leap into action. They must search the net literally every day. Unbelievable.
it is very likely that they subscribe to Google Alert for your name, or a similar service.

I thought that your posts were an excellent addition to the discussion; it even took it on a whole new level, IMO.
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

freetrinity said:
Laura said:
Larry, I hope I'm helping out. I don't usually post on other forums, but in this case, I made an exception because that forum seems to have a lot of tuned in people who are intelligent and thoughtful. I hope it's not a mistake.
I thought that your posts were an excellent addition to the discussion; it even took it on a whole new level, IMO.
Yes indeed. It offered the readers of DU an extremely valuable lesson in identifying the mental pathology of deviants, their tactics, and its effect on a group of normal humans. It's good to see the information about deviants reaching new people, who find that it actually explains many observable phenomena, particularly in politics. And, even though "Fulcanelli's" agenda was completely transparent from the first venomous words of his/her initial post, this was thrown into stark relief by "Laurel700's" measured and intelligent presentation of facts. Definitely NOT a mistake, Laura, imho.
 
Very detailed analysis, Chrisxt11. The magnetite sounds like bad stuff...worse than snake oil. Speaking of oil, Pepin is offering a typical STS "offer one can't refuse" by warning his readers that they have only two choices...become a WHITE blood cell,(ie: follow Pepin) or a loser red cell (ie:reject Pepin.) Sounds so much like the only choices given to an individual (you may have water or oil to drink) by STS control freaks that Laura writes about in the Wave Series.

Thank you for wading through this sludge.
 
This section feels exactly like the beginning of a hypnosis session. Very clever... First he induces a trance then come the suggestions.

christx11 said:
Eric Pepin begins his book with a story about himself as a seven year old. The story is all full of sensory adjectives describing nature, attempting to immediately disarm the mind of the reader by taking the reader into a sympathetic state with Eric himself and his words. In a work of fiction where the reader knows they are looking for entertainment or even in a work of non-fiction where for instance an author describes the sounds and smells of war, such literary devices work well. Here it is used for psychological management. Manny Otto who came to the SOTT.NET forum used the same technique but in a slightly different manner. To get what you want, set a tone from the start that flatters the target mind, compliment or put at ease or make them feel good somehow about themselves and they will tend then not to look so critically at what follows. It is a mentally disarming of the other person or persons gaining positive favor for yourself in whatever you may then attempt to get or achieve. [/color]

Eric Pepin Handbook of the Navigator Page 9 said:
I was about seven years old on a warm summer day. The air was laced with the scent of dry grass fields and the hum of buzzing insects in the distance. I was sitting on the steps to my home listening deeply to the melody of sounds and the smells of nature. The harmony of scent and sound gave way to great inner peace for me and it still does to this day. {"warm summer day" "air laced with" "scent of dry grass fields" "hum of buzzing insects" "listening deeply" "melody of sounds" "smells of nature" "harmony of scent and sound" "great inner peace" "melody" "harmony" ... }

This harmony moved my consciousness to a place in my mind I was unfamiliar with but it felt completely natural. I now refer to this place as 'the in-between'. {** ah yes 'the in-between'} Within that place I felt something directing me ever-so subtly to walk out into a nearby field that was overgrown with tall dry grass.

I found a small path and began to walk towards the center of the field, knowing somehow that it was my destination. I knew there was a small pond in the field, once used for dairy cows. I had ice-skated on it with friends during the winter months but had not returned since spring.
Eric Pepin's story continues with just as much sensory overload as in the above. Young seven year old Pepin meets a grasshopper and examines it and becomes immersed in its detail when Eric says of the grasshopper,
 
Very nice job Christx11 - not sure how you read that NLP nonsense (thanks for doing it so I didn't have to) - quite obvious to see once one points out the patterns in speech and what they mean.
 
I think this article is of interest:

link: http://www.news.com/8301-10784_3-9911501-7.html?tag=nefd.lede (note: the original article contains a lot of hyperlinks to other articles and some pictures that I didn't reproduce below)

CNet News said:
Courts chip away at Web sites' decade-old legal shield
Posted by Anne Broache | 97 comments

For more than a decade, Web site operators have enjoyed a broad legal shield against lawsuits filed over material posted by their users, which has let user-driven sites like YouTube and MySpace.com flourish.

But a pair of recent rulings by federal district judges have chipped away at that protective shield. If those decisions are upheld on appeal, and if more judges follow suit, Web site operators and Internet service providers may find themselves compelled to police what their users post--or face the unsettling prospect of being held liable for the contents.

"We fear these cases might inspire a wave of new lawsuits that, even if ultimately dismissed, will create a chilling effect," said Sophia Cope, an attorney for the Center for Democracy and Technology, which has filed briefs supporting broad immunity and gets some financial support from a number of prominent Internet companies. "Many small start-up Web services might find that the costs of defending such suits--in terms of time and legal fees--are too much to bear."

The legal shield comes from a portion of the 1996 Telecommunications Act, which generally says Web sites aren't liable for their users' posts or other content they provide. That has immunized the dot-com industry from a wide range of civil lawsuits spanning everything from defamation to--in a case decided last year involving MySpace--lawsuits alleging that better child safety and age verification measures should have been put into place. (Individual "content providers" who post defamatory comments, upload inflammatory videos of their own creation, and the like, are still vulnerable to lawsuits.)

In early test cases such as Zeran v. AOL, courts have interpreted Section 230 of the Telecommunications Act to supply fairly broad immunity for Web hosts. That trend has largely continued in recent years, with judges finding, for example, that dating site Matchmaker.com was immune from a lawsuit involving an unknown prankster's phony profile impersonating actress Christianne Carafano, and that Craigslist wasn't responsible for allegedly discriminatory housing ads posted by users of the online classifieds site.

Perhaps ironically, the recent decisions that seem to be taking a narrower interpretation of Section 230 also stem from disputes over online dating and roommate matching.

'Bogus' FriendFinder profiles
The first of the two cases pits an anonymous New Hampshire woman against the FriendFinder Network, an operator of dating sites--some sexually explicit--including AdultFriendFinder.com and LesbianPersonals.com. Jane Doe accused FriendFinder of causing her various sorts of harm by allowing "bogus" sexually explicit profiles that could be "reasonably identified" as portraying herself to be published without her knowledge by someone else to its Web properties, as well as in snippets in FriendFinder advertisements on search engines and other third-party Web sites.

A recent ruling by U.S. District Judge Joseph LaPlante in New Hampshire federal court on March 27 partially sided with FriendFinder, ruling against some of Jane Doe's claims against the company.

But LaPlante also differed from previous opinions in one important area. He refused to dismiss Jane Doe's argument that FriendFinder's republication of her profile invaded her "intellectual-property rights" under New Hampshire law. She claimed to be concerned about violations to her "right of publicity," which says an individual generally has the right to control how his name, image, and likeness is used commercially--and the court ruled that Doe's argument fell into the category of intellectual-property law.

That point is crucial because, when writing Section 230, Congress explicitly said its shield does not extend to lawsuits "pertaining to intellectual property." Until Judge LaPlante's order, courts had viewed that only as applying to federal claims mostly about copyrights and trademarks--and not state lawsuits over more amorphous publicity rights.

The reasons this could create headaches for Web publishers are twofold, said Eric Goldman, director of the High Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University. For one thing, laws governing "rights of publicity" are not uniform across the states, which means e-commerce companies would be forced to align their operations with the most restrictive state's law.

And unlike in copyright or trademark cases, where there are fairly well-established rules governing how Web sites are supposed to respond to such infractions posted by third parties, "we don't know what rules are; we have no good case law" on rights of publicity, Goldman added.

Others fear that the ruling could prompt legal mischief. For instance, courts have ruled in the past that Web publishers can be immunized for posts that tarnish someone's reputation--a practice typically covered by defamation laws. CDT's Cope said she's concerned the intellectual-property exception will "swallow the rule," inspiring other courts to allow plaintiffs to slip in defamation claims and others under the guise of "intellectual property" claims.

Judge LaPlante's ruling, however, is not the end of the case. The court can now hear evidence on whether to agree with Jane Doe's remaining allegations. Judges aren't exactly known for changing their minds, once they've made a decision. But Ira Rothken, the lead attorney defending FriendFinder in the case, said he believes any subsequent appeal to the 1st Circuit would result in a finding that state-level intellectual-property laws, too, are subject to the Section 230 exemption.

Roommates.com's matchmaking woes
The other Section 230 saga concerns a Web site called Roommates.com, which allows users to set up profiles and seek roommate matches in thousands of U.S. cities. One of the ways the site attempts to spark matches is through requiring members to complete questionnaires that stock their profiles with a number of personal details, including their gender, sexual orientation, and whether they have children, according to court documents.

Those personal queries drew a lawsuit from the Fair Housing Councils of the San Fernando Valley and San Diego, which claimed they violated the federal Fair Housing Act and California state housing discrimination laws. A federal district sided with Roommates.com's argument that Section 230 immunized it from such claims, but a divided 9th Circuit Court of Appeals recently disagreed, and that's why implications for other Web publishers could arise. (Here's a PDF of that 54-page opinion.)

The majority, led by Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, ruled that Roommates was not covered by Section 230's shield because it helped "to develop unlawful content" through its requisite questionnaire, which featured preprogrammed drop-down menus containing various possible answers for the allegedly offending questions. The judges also said that because Roommates.com engineered its site in a way that allows site users to search for and sort roommate listings based on those criteria, it's an "information content provider," which, by law, isn't immune to Section 230.

"If such questions are unlawful when posed face-to-face or by telephone, they don't magically become lawful when asked electronically online," Kozinski wrote. "The Communications Decency Act was not meant to create a lawless no man's land on the Internet." (The CDA, the "antiporn" sections of which were struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court on First Amendment grounds, was included in the 1996 Telecommunications Act.)

By contrast, the same judges found that it was no problem for Roommates to ask users to write an open-ended summary of what they're seeking in a roommate, since that request was "neutral."

If that way of thinking is ultimately applied more broadly, the millions of Web sites that routinely use prompts and drop-down menus to solicit, publish, and sort information from their users could be forced to change their practices or face new legal liability, the three dissenting judges argued.

"The majority's unprecedented expansion of liability for Internet service providers threatens to chill the robust development of the Internet that Congress envisioned," Circuit Judge M. Margaret McKeown wrote for the dissent. "Instead of the 'robust' immunity envisioned by Congress, interactive service providers are left scratching their heads and wondering where immunity ends and liability begins."

This case was closely watched, leading Amazon.com, Google, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Civil Liberties Union, and a number of news organizations to file briefs with the court in support of Roommates. They argued that a decision in favor of the fair-housing groups would choke innovative new Web services and stifle free speech in online forums--particularly the "sortable" user ratings and feedback at sites like eBay and Amazon.com, and "tagging" features at sites like YouTube and Flickr.

One attorney who analyzed the case said the majority's stance, which clearly took aim at business practices considered unfriendly to fair-housing laws, said the case may represent a narrowing of the law but could actually be good for Web site operators who value Section 230.

"Imagine, shall we say, a 'progressive' congressman standing up in Washington and saying, hey, with this Section 230 scheme, we give a license to Web site operators to run hate mills, build up bastions of bigotry, and sanctuaries for racism," Evan Brown, a Chicago-based attorney who focuses on Internet law, wrote in a recent blog post. "In short, a Roommates.com victory could have given a battalion's worth of ammunition--in the form of emotional, irrational, rhetoric--to Section 230's critics. Some in Congress would have called for its head."
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

Trust me the information is one hundred percent correct. And there is a lot more.
Only truly pathological people need to use "TRUST ME" to start a sentence.

Laura Knight Jadczyk was also arrested for Attempted Murder in 1970. She beat and stabbed a guy and left him for dead. She has three children with three husbands. Her current husband Ark Jadczyk is a long time employee of DARPA the super-secret defense research agency located in the pentagon. Darpa is also in control of the mind control projects for the military.

Laura Knight Jadczyk channells aliens from Cassiopaea through a ouija board. They are the ones that are telling Laura who is Cointelpro and who is not. In other words Laura has no physical evidence for her accusations. She admits that she receives the cointelpro information from the aliens on the other side of the ouija board.
This dude really needs to stop taking the brown acid. When smear is this outrageous it defies the laws of humor!

Laura wrote a book on 911 and never once tells the reader that her husband was an employee of the pentagon. She never once tells the reader of DARPA's possible involvement in 911.

Laura Knight Jadczyk is trying to buy credibility by publishing this book through her vanity press. But the word is out on her and she is going down.
Complete projection and magical thinking. Wonder how his unicorn farm is doing?

Examine the law suit against her by Mr. Pepin. he says that she has accused him of being cointelpr. Okay first question: why would the FBI make a guy who teaches mediatation a cointelpro operative? Secondly: What evidence does Laura present to prove her accusation? ZERO. NOTHING!

On that score alone Pepin will win the court case and Laura will disappear.
He hopes!! Laura's laid out some very clear examples - using Pepin's OWN WORDS to show he's a sociopath and possibly Cointelpro. Too bad Mr. Bridges and his sycophants can't read.

Don't be fooled by pentagon-inspired mind control operations like Laura Knight Jadczyk!
Wow!!! Now Laura's not just a scary person, she's a scary omnipotent "operations"!

be afraid... lol
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

ph said:
Complete projection and magical thinking. Wonder how his unicorn farm is doing?
:lol: :lol: :lol: :lol: aaaahahahahahhahahahahhaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Thanks, purplehaze - that laugh was much enjoyed.
 
Psychopath Attack on Democratic Underground

I just had a look at the DU thread again. How utterly sad, and disappointing that it degenerated the way it did. Laura, the quality and tone of your posts continue to speak to me heart and mind, and I just want to say that I really admire your strength and patience. Thank you for doing this most important work.

The problem is, the more you try to answer to accusations the psychos bring up, the more accusations they make. It seems you will never be able to resolve the issue for people who are unwilling to take a step back, and observe and analyze the overall dynamics.

On the one hand, I think your posts are crucial in maintaining a positive discussion, but at a certain point I can't help but wonder if withdrawing and allowing the psychos to play ball by themselves would make it easier for people to see the stark contrast to healthy discourse.

Again, I found the thread got exhausting (I can imagine how YOU feel!!!). Fortunately, I had the sense to resort to scanning for gist when it got to be too much. I might try to go back to analyze it in a little more depth when I feel like I can handle it. I learned, after my experience reading the godlikeproductions thread, that giving the same kind of empathy and attention to the psycho's posts that I would give to a normal person's, was like consenting to a journey through a labryinth leading to hell.
 
Wonder if Eric Pepin has a bunker over there in Oregon?

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/153298-Swarm-of-Earthquakes-Detected-Off-Oregon

Scientists listening to underwater microphones have detected an unusual swarm of earthquakes off central Oregon, something that often happens before a volcanic eruption - except there are no volcanoes in the area.

Scientists don't know exactly what the earthquakes mean, but they could be the result of molten rock rumbling away from the recognized earthquake faults off Oregon, said Robert Dziak, a geophysicist for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and Oregon State University.

There have been more than 600 quakes over the past 10 days in a basin 150 miles southwest of Newport. The biggest was magnitude 5.4, and two others were more than magnitude 5.0, OSU reported.
Which reminded me of this (and notice it was TEN years ago):

4 July 98

A: We are glad you noticed this birth of the spike. (...) 27 days of record heat out of 30, oh my oh my! Suggest you awaken your internet pals, as they are too busy chasing "goblins" to notice. (...) In Florida now, where to next? How about a shattering subduction quake in Pacific Northwest of U.S.? We estimate 10.4 on the Richter scale. We have warned of Ranier. Imagine a 150 meter high tsunami in Puget Sound...

Q: (L) Now, you have mentioned this earthquake. I know that you don't usually give predictions, why have you done so now?

A: We do not give time tables. (No kidding!)

Q: (L) Anything else other than a tsunami in Puget Sound and a big subduction quake... 10.4 on the Richter scale is almost inconceivable.

A: Ranier... caldera.

Q: (L) What about the caldera?

A: Expect one. (This is what the swarms off Oregon made me think of)

Q: (L) Other than floods, anything else for Florida upcoming?

A: All areas experience accelerating "freak weather patterns."

Q: (L) Okay, all of these freaky weather patterns and bizarre things going on on the planet, how does it relate to the comet cluster and the brown star? Is it related?

A: Human experiential cycle intersects.

Q: (L) Any specifice physical manifestation of either this brown star or this comet cluster or this realm border, that is related to these events on the planet?

A: Approach of wave stimulates precursor activity which in turn causes effects which in turn stimulates further "heating up" of activity...
I'm sure things will hold stable for awhile, but one naturally wonders about that comment "Human experiential cycle intersects" in relation to Pepin's lawsuit?

It's not nice to try to fool Mother Cassiopaea - or to sue her.
 
About Mt. Rainier

_http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Rainier

Mount Rainier is an active[1] stratovolcano (also known as a composite volcano) in Pierce County, Washington, located 54 miles (87 km) southeast of Seattle, Washington, in the United States. It is the highest peak in the Cascade Range and Cascade Volcanic Arc at 14,411 feet (4,392 m). The mountain and the surrounding area are protected within Mount Rainier National Park. With 26 major glaciers, Mount Rainier is the most heavily glaciated peak in the lower 48 states with 35 square miles (91 km²) of permanent snowfields and glaciers. The summit is topped by two volcanic craters, each over 1,000 feet (300 m) in diameter with the larger east crater overlapping the west crater. Geothermal heat from the volcano keeps areas of both crater rims free of snow and ice, and has formed an extensive network of glacier caves within the ice-filled craters.
WAMap-doton-MtRainier.png


Hmmm... a caldera?

A caldera is a volcanic feature formed by the collapse of land following a volcanic eruption. They are often confused with volcanic craters. The word 'caldera' comes from the Spanish language, meaning "cauldron". (...)

When Yellowstone Caldera last erupted 640,000 years ago it released 1,000 cubic kilometers of material, covering a substantial part of North America in up to two meters of debris. By comparison, when Mount St. Helens erupted in 1980, it released 1.2 cubic kilometers of ejecta. The ecological effects of the eruption of a large caldera can be seen in the record of the Lake Toba eruption in Indonesia. About 75,000 years ago, this volcano released 2,800 cubic kilometers of ejecta, the largest known eruption within the Quaternary Period (last 1.8 million years). In the late 1990s, archeologist Stanley Ambrose [1] proposed that a volcanic winter induced by this eruption reduced the human population to a few thousand individuals, resulting in a population bottleneck (see Toba catastrophe theory). Even larger caldera-forming eruptions are known, especially La Garita Caldera in the San Juan Mountains of Colorado, where the 5,000 cubic kilometer Fish Canyon Tuff was blasted out in a truly major single eruption 27.8 million years ago.
Rainier84_mount_rainier_and_tacoma_08-20-84_med.jpg


Hmmm... now that I dug this stuff up, I notice that Rainier is in "Pierce County."

21 May 1997

Q: Anyway, I found at the same longitude as Oak Island, a
place with the name "Percee." This led to Fontainebleau,
Chartres, and Coll du Perche and Moulins la Marche. Then,
the 'blue waters and white skies' led to lake Geneva and
Point Perce. And this was the third 'Percy'...

A: Devour newspapers for any recent news re: Percy.
Well, I've been looking for 11 years now. All kinds of strange things have popped up, but nothing stranger than this qwinky-dink.
 

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