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Sometime over the past couple of years I noticed the emergence of Rima Laibow in the Medical Freedom Movement (MFM). I can't recall where I first saw her, but she was in the comment crowd in Steve Kirsch's Vaccine Safety Research Foundation (VSRF) sometime in early 2022. Watching her in an interview, I immediately knew who she was because I grew up being "trained" in a program that her late husband, Major General Albert Stubblebine, managed from the top of military intelligence. Since the start of the plandemonium, her "Great Culling" episode of Jesse Ventura's Conspiracy Theory program has been viewed many times. If you're not familiar, you should watch it now in order to understand where we're headed in this article.
Laibow's claims include an "induced pandemic", the use of deadly vaccines, induced infertility, and FEMA concentration camps. While various among these claims may be more or less true (my opinions currently vary on the topics she covers), I'd like to focus on a particular piece of Laibow's story, which is the claim that one of her patients was a head of state who told her about this Great Culling.
As luck would have it, I got to ask Laibow about her story during a Medical Doctors for COVID Ethics meeting last year. It will become clear later in this article why I wanted to talk with her. Laibow added details not heard in her Ventura interview. She said that in 2004, a female head of state blabbed to her in what sounded like a casual manner about the Great Culling. I can't recall if it was during that meeting or elsewhere, but I believe she mentioned the head of state wearing a tiara.
But for some reason, in the midst of this global crisis we face, she can't break doctor-patient confidentiality to name a name?!
There weren't a whole lot of female heads of state in the world in 2004. How many of them wear tiaras, visit doctors in the U.S., and chat about global genocide?
How many would chat about global genocide to a doctor whose husband was the head of INSCOM, running key military intelligence programs?! Wouldn't her security detail have her briefed on her doctor's relationships?
If you can't tell, the skeptical side of my brain is already running in overdrive. And the gears don't slow down when I find out that Laibow sold "nano silver products" as a solution to multiple virus panics. From an article written in 2014,
History is repeating itself with the recent Ebola outbreak in West Africa. The fear engendered by Ebola has created an opportunity for quacks everywhere to pitch their beliefs and sell their supplements. In a move reminiscent of the Rath fiasco, Rima Laibow, the “medical director” for a company called Natural Solutions Foundation, sent a letter to top African health officials claiming that “There is good reason to believe that there already is a natural solution for, and prevention against, the terrifying novel Ebola virus.” Laibow goes on to encourage them to use “nanosilver,” which coincidentally, her company sells.
In late 2021, district and federal courts ordered Laibow and a co-trustee to stop selling "nano silver products" via the Natural Solutions Foundation. However, I'll leave aside any debate over whether such products work, and simply note that there is research (which I haven't studied) suggesting that silver nanoparticles are effective in blocking SARS-CoV-2 (Jeremiah et al, 2020 was particularly topical), though some of that research includes the use of graphene oxide in the product, which is currently suspected by some people as being hidden in COVID-19 vaccines and making people sick. A deep dive into all this is beyond the scope of this article, though I'll quote a concern expressed in the Jeremiah paper,
Luciferase-based pseudovirus entry assay revealed that AgNPs potently inhibited viral entry step via disrupting viral integrity. These results indicate that AgNPs are highly potent microbicides against SARS-CoV-2 but should be used with caution due to their cytotoxic effects and their potential to derange environmental ecosystems when improperly disposed.
What I'd really like to talk about is whether Laibow's story about the Great Culling can be trusted.
Another Origin Story Mystery?
Just yesterday I came across this video of David Icke from 1997.
Wouldn't it be easier to do all this research if these videos were more easily available on YouTube? Would it be easier to share the research if RTE weren't banned from YouTube? Sigh.
All the way back in 1997, Icke was claiming that viruses would be created in labs, along with vaccines, to cull the population while changing the way old people (and "useless eaters" in general) would receive health care. Aside from the very reasonable and pertinent quibble over whether SARS-CoV-2 is a "real" quasi-species virus, a viral clone, or something different, Icke's message seems quite prescient (though less so if the zoonosis or gain-of-function stories are psyops, ahem).
This is seven full years before Laibow says that a head of state yapped to her about the plan. Okay, sure, people hear about planned genocide stories at different times. But wouldn't some sort of intelligence about such a plan have filtered to and through her husband?
Maybe, but Icke wasn't the only person telling a highly similar story in the 90s. In the late 1990s, Ed Dames told a similar story on the Art Bell Show:
The Dames story includes the description of vaccine passports. Maybe he really was the psychic master of that era?
What is particularly interesting at this point is that at the time of this interview, Ed Dames was the most prominent active Remote Viewer from the military's Stargate Project, which happened to be overseen actively by Major General Albert Stubblebine—Laibow's late husband.
So, in order to buy into Laibow's story, I have to imagine that she was entirely unaware of Icke, despite the fact that she seemed to be active in the conspiracy theory community, taking part in UFO sightings discussions.
In order to trust Laibow completely, I would also have to believe that one of her husband's star underlings was unable to make him, and thus her, aware of vaccine disaster revelations shocking enough that he took it to the nation's largest conspiracy theory radio program.
What makes me scratch my head further is Laibow's work with the Citizen's Commission for Human Rights (CCHR). Scientology helped build the CCHR, and the organization is often viewed as a front group for the UFO cult (though I do find some of their arguments to be reasonable or simply correct…which is how either a good organization or a limited hangout would work). But then, this does not surprise me given that the Remote Viewing project was funded at the Stanford Research Institute by former Scientologist Erhard Werner, and staffed with Scientologists Hal Putoff, Pat Price, and Ingo Swan. But all of that seems highly suggestive of a common connection between Scientology and military intelligence—something I already strongly suspect—and should make us wonder about all of the information that comes out of that union (or each individually). It's at that point that we should remember L Ron Hubbard's not-well-disguised eugenics drive.
Though I learned most everything above in this article over the past two-ish years, it's what I heard in my childhood that makes me doubt Laibow's story. In the early 1980s, when the cult I grew up in was involved with the Remote Viewing program, I heard Stubblebine talk about "vaccine genocide" in person. I was just a kid, but it was the scariest thing I'd ever heard at the time. Frustratingly, I've largely kept that story to myself among friends because as a teenager it became clear that I could only lose credibility among peers for trying to explain all of what that was about.
But here we are—and we even have the Remote Viewers telling us about fibrin clots. Psychic predictions? Or evidence of planning at the level of military intelligence?
I think evidence grows by the day (and has been growing in obvious ways for several years now) that we're in the midst of the most sophisticated and long-planned Mindwar ever conceived. Just because somebody you don't know, whom you're told is a leader, tells you what you know is true or want to hear doesn't mean they have your best interest at heart. And whatever you might believe about it, we should probably be vetting every voice in the MFM. Even a false story about the origin of information could lead us to looking in the wrong places for truth.
Laibow has said that she was told about the "great culling" in 2002 by a female head of state of a small European country. I thought it may have been Tarja Halonen, who was the president of the Finland at the time. However in an interview with Sarah Westall in 2023, Laibow said that her source sometimes wore a crown, which seems to indicate that she was a queen.
In 2002, I think Denmark and the Netherlands were the only small European countries which had a queen: "The regnant monarchs of Europe on 2002, descendants of Queen Victoria, gathered at Windsor Castle to celebrate the Queen Elizabeth Golden Jubilee: (L to R) The King of Belgium, the King of Spain, the King of Norway, the King of Sweden, the Grand Duke of Luxembourg, the Queen of Denmark, the Queen of United Kingdom and the Queen of The Netherlands." (https://www.facebook.com/PrincepsFidelissimus/photos/a.456865864355836/3322684101107317/) In 2002, the Queen of Netherlands was Beatrix and the Queen of Denmark was Margrethe II. But Laibow is probably just full of crap though.
One source which says that Hal Puthoff, Ingo Swann, and Pat Price were Scientologists is the book "The Church of Scientology: A History of a New Religion" by Hugh Urban (https://books.google.com/books?id=8lgHtauc5R4C&pg=PA113):
> Remote viewing, as we saw in chapter 2, was one of the advanced abilities promised by Scientology training. As Hubbard defined it in the Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary, a remote viewpoint is "a viewpoint without the consideration by the thetan that he is located at that point. The thetan may have any number of remote viewpoints." A physicist with a PhD from Stanford University, Harold Puthoff joined Scientology in the late 1960s and quickly advanced to the OT VII level by 1971. In fact, he wrote enthusiastically of his "wins" in Scientology, claiming to have achieved "remote viewing" abilities. In 1974, Puthoff also wrote a piece for Scientology's Celebrity magazine, stating that Scientology had given him "a feeling of absolute fearlessness."[100]
> In the early 1970s, Puthoff and his collaborator, Russell Targ, joined the Electronics and Bioengineering Lab at Stanford Research Institute (SRI). In addition to their mainstream research, they also began various studies of the paranormal, including testing with a psychic and artist named Ingo Swann, who was an OT IV Scientologist. In July 1973, Swann had in fact presented a paper at a conference in Prague on the subject of the "Scientology paradigm as a model for developing and exploring paranormal abilities."[101] Another gifted psychic who joined the program was Pat Price, a former police officer and a fellow OT IV Scientologist. As cofounder of the SRI program, Russell Targ, notes in his memoir, "Ingo and Pat both felt that they learned certain useful techniques from Scientology that enhanced their already significant psi ability"; however, he goes on to say that many other psychics involved in the program had no Scientology association whatsoever and were equally proficient at remote viewing. "So," Targ concludes, "it is not necessary to give away all your money... to develop your ESP."[102] Other key figures in the psychic research had only peripheral Scientology connections. Thus Edwin May, who inherited directorship of the SRI program in 1985, had also been involved in Scientology courses in the early 1970s and initially found them useful. But he eventually grew disillusioned with the high costs of Scientology and finally "said to hell with it” after the FBI raids on the church in 1977.[103]
> [...]
> Puthoff later resigned his Scientology membership in the mid-1970s and thereafter lent his support to a group of anti-Scientologists who criticized the church because of its conspiratorial, cultlike atmosphere. Swann, too, eventually resigned from Scientology. Price, meanwhile, died under mysterious circumstances in Las Vegas in 1975. Russell Targ, the cofounder of the psychic research program, claims that Price was in fact "funneling classified remote viewing data to the Scientology Guardian's Office" and suggests that either the CIA or the Russians may have been involved in his death.[105]
> However, Puthoff and Targ remained convinced that Swann, Price, and others involved in the testing had genuine psychic powers, including the power of remote viewing. The results of their findings were published in 1977 as _Mind-Reach: Scientists Look at Psychic Ability_, which claims for these psychics many of the same powers of remote viewing claimed by Hubbard and OT Scientologists: "The basic phenomenon appears to cover a range of subjective experience variously referred to ... as astral projection ... clairvoyance or out-of-body experience ... exteriorization or dissociation."[106]
Russel Targ was a stage magician before he became a remote viewer, and he said: "As a high school student I was very interested in magic and did all sorts of pretend mind reading on the stage." (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-2kwiNw--nI&t=32m1s) In the book "The Secret Life of Uri Geller: CIA Masterspy?, it's mentioned that when Geller was 16 years old, he was recruited as a courier by the Mossad agent Yoav Shacham, and that Geller was a "nightclub magician" before he was introduced to the SRI by Israeli intelligence (https://books.google.com/books?id=2wgEDgAAQBAJ&pg=PT27):
> Puthoff had early indications, however, that he and his colleague Russell Targ would be examining someone who was rather more than a nightclub magician, as Uri had been when Targ's doctor/physicist friend Andrija Puharich first saw him in Tel Aviv. 'Behind the scenes,' Puthoff explains today, 'we were approached by Israeli Intelligence and they had been working with Geller in Israel.
> [...]
> As we know from Kit Green's account in the previous chapter, back in the early 1970s, the Mossad was keen to swap intelligence with the USA, to the extent that it alerted the Americans to the unusual young man and told them that it was willing to allow the US intelligence and scientific communities to take a look at him. The Mossad's overture was followed by Andrija Puharich's mission to Israel to do semi-formal testing on Uri, and his eventual arrival in the USA in 1972.
Ed Riordan is one of the remote viewers for Dick Algire's CryptoViewing team, but was Algire was previously a member of the remote viewing team of Courtney Brown. Courtney Brown had a role in the Heaven's Gate suicides, because he appeared on Coast to Coast FM claiming that he had remote viewed the "companion" object of the Hale Bopp comet, and next he also claimed that he had received a photo of the companion object from a well-known astrophysicist (https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1997/02/23/talk-radios-comet-caper/0cd6bb47-04eb-40cb-ba1a-044941f917c3/):
> The Hale-Bopp comet, a chunk of rock and ice sailing through interplanetary space, was discovered by American amateur astronomers Alan Hale and Thomas Bopp in July 1995. But the real fireworks began Nov. 14, 1996, when amateur astronomer Chuck Shramek of Houston posted on the Internet a telescopic photograph he had taken. Near the incoming comet, the photo showed, was a luminous body with Saturn-like rings -- an object "so bright and strange I began to pray," said Shramek, who announced his find on Bell's show.
> Enter Courtney Brown -- a tenured political science professor at Emory University in Atlanta, author of a book called "Cosmic Voyage," and president and owner of Farsight Institute, a company specializing in "scientific remote viewing," the latest jargon for clairvoyance.
> [...]
> Following Shramek as a guest on Bell's show, the professor revealed that the Farsight Institute's remote-viewers had found the mysterious "companion" object to be larger than Earth, hollow and "under intelligent control" -- a kind of planetary spaceship hitching a ride on the comet.
> On Nov. 29, Brown appeared again on Bell's program, this time with Prudence Calabrese, his assistant. Calabrese told Bell's audience that a well-known astrophysicist at a "top ten university" had sent Brown information confirming Farsight's remote-viewing results.
> This astrophysicist, she went on, had taken several hundred photographs of the luminous object, which was not only real, but emanating "unambiguous radio signals." More significantly, the unnamed gentleman from the prestigious university planned to hold a press conference in a week to announce his findings. Meanwhile, he had sent Brown three rolls of undeveloped film. Two rolls unfortunately turned out blank, but the third had five "very good astronomical photographs," in Calabrese's words.
> To document their claim, Brown and Calabrese said, they had provided copies of one photo to Bell and another guest on the same show, Whitley Strieber, a man famous for his accounts of contacts between humans and aliens.There was a small catch, however: Bell and Strieber had agreed not to release their copies until after the announcement. The astrophysicist wished to remain anonymous until then, and didn't want anyone trying to trace the photo back to the originating observatory. The astrophysicist feared for "the safety of his family," Calabrese said, and wanted to develop "a completely irrefutable analysis before coming forward."
The mansion where the members of the Heaven's Gate cult lived was owned by an Iranian named Sam Koutchesfahani, who had a role in getting the alleged 9/11 hijackers to the United States and who is linked to Genesis Communications Network which syndicates Alex Jones's radio show (http://web.archive.org/web/20041009141002/https://www.madcowprod.com/mc6712004.html, http://web.archive.org/web/20041020050635/https://www.madcowprod.com/MC6812004.html).
Variants are at the core of post pandemic hysteria. Kept alive by all members of the Covid Theater Community.
On one side they dangle silly names and fancy alphanumeric monikers. On the other side they insist bad science will unleash a killer variant any…day…now. Both are lies designed to prevent covid from ever fizzling out. Ever.
Covid is profitable not only for big pharma but also for those alleging to save us from big pharma. Both sides are exploiting us for their own selfish purposes using perpetual fear and alarm.
Want to end covid? Then drive a stake through the heart of VARIANTS. See them as a marketing strategy. Because that’s exactly what they are.