Spiritual reading; film “Extraordinary Measures”; Brendan Fraser and the molesting jew

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Canadian actor Brendan Fraser and Keri Russell as his wife, the mother of their two dying kids, in the medical film drama “Extraordinary Measures.” I have been in a life-and-death medical struggle (for Margi) that lasted 4 1/3 years and thousands of hours and dollars, plus many tears, lots of sadness and depression; this film is uplifting but also realistic about how things go, including conflict due to exhaustion and serious financial fears.

My eyes, I just noticed, look so tired in this Dec. 2019 pic; this was one of hundreds of nights of interrupted sleep. Yes, I think the jews gave Margi this cancer, or they accelerated it, in order to punish her for white nationalism, for her support of my work, and to use up our time and funds.

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80% of her inheritance went into fighting her painful, lethal throat cancer instead of waht she devotedly wanted: to support our cause of white survival.

It was a huge, daily spiritual struggle from May 2018-September 2022.

It almost consumes your whole life when someone you love faces a slow death before their time and did nothing, such as an unhealthy lifestyle, to deserve it. Killed by throat cancer and a resulting stroke, Margi never smoke, drank, ate junk or got overweight, and always was out gardening, walking on the beach, and getting sun, fresh air and good exercise. Though she was my wife, and I loved her, Margi was also the kind of sweet person everyone wanted to see make it.

See further below.

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……Spiritual reading for May 2

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Please go out and spread some love today. This is the most important thing for you to do. Take all that you know, all that you believe, all that you hold in your heart and share it energetically. There is no need to speak, to act or to do—just allow the deep reservoir of love which you carry to expand outward, to touch those with whom you come in contact.

As you know, fear and despair can creep into people’s lives, especially those who are most unconscious.

*** This is yet another instance of congruence between Eckhart Tolle’s teachings and nordic alien thought

To be unconscious means your mind is doing its own thing, which often is making you miserable. You regret the past or are angry about it, and you see the future with dread. You can never fully focus on or fully enjoy anything as a result, and that handicaps your whole life.

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These forces can act powerfully, particularly when they are not seen for what they are, and will wreak havoc if they are allowed to grow larger. Because so many are so much in the dark about what is happening on your planet, it is not uncommon for people to give their negative emotions free rein.

In light of this, it is a good practice to share your higher vibration in an intentional manner not just today, but every day. You needn’t direct it or send it to specific individuals or places. Rather, we suggest that you simply allow it to ripple outward and touch that which it touches. Put it into the energetic feld.

Now, this practice is one of many of you already have, and that is good. It is also one that poses some difficulty when you yourself are possessed by fear and despair. If you find that your love energy is inaccessible, so be it. Don’t try to force it—obviously that won’t work. But we ask that each day you set your intent to find and share your love and your light with any and all who cross your path.

You will fail to do this, of course— there will be times when you are angry or sad, or when your love is jammed by someone you encounter.

But the more you intend to do this, the more it will happen and the more good it will do.

Today is a wonderful day to begin this practice if it is not something you already do. There will be a great receptivity today. Your love will make a difference.

You may not see it–that will generally be the case, you know. You are passing on that which you have already received. Much of the time, you will never know how what you are doing alters your world and the lives of the beings who inhabit it, but we can assure you that if you make this a practice, you will indeed alter much.

This is the way that things work.

What you may be able to observe is how such a practice changes you yourself. This will be a delight for many of you. Enjoy it—you are all carriers of great bounty and beauty. There is little that heals and gives joy to the soul more than sharing its treasures. Nothing goes just one way anymore.

We love you very much.

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….“Extraordinary Measures” — superb 2010 film w/Harrison Ford & Brendan Fraser that flopped with the brain-dead masses   

David Scott von Braun, who has become a good friend and ally, is quite the movie lover, and he got me to see “Extraordinary Measures” last night.

It was excellent, but I was appalled to read it was a disaster at the box office, losing $20 million. 🙁

 

Wiki:

Extraordinary Measures is a 2010 American medical drama film starring Brendan FraserHarrison Ford, and Keri Russell. It was the first film produced by CBS Films, the film division of CBS Corporation, who released the film on January 22, 2010. The film is about parents who form a biotechnology company to develop a drug to save the lives of their children, who have a life-threatening disease. The film is based on the true story of John and Aileen Crowley, whose children have Pompe’s disease. The film was shot in OregonTualatin, Oregon and Vancouver, Washington.

Plot[edit]

John Crowley and his wife Aileen are a Portland couple with two of their three children suffering from Pompe disease, a genetic anomaly that typically kills most children before their tenth birthdays. John, an advertising executive, contacts Robert Stonehill, a PhD researcher in Nebraska who has done innovative research for an enzyme treatment for the rare disease. John and Aileen raise money to help Stonehill’s research and the required clinical trials.

John takes on the task full-time to save his children’s lives, launching a biotechnology research company working with venture capitalists and then rival teams of researchers. This task proves very daunting for Stonehill, who already works around the clock.

As time is running short, Stonehill’s angry outburst hinders the company’s faith in him, and the profit motive may upend John’s hopes. The researchers race against time to save the children who have the disease.

The movie also showed the greatness of Brendan Fraser’s character to overcome the huge and stubborn ego of Dr. Stonehill, which threatened to sabotage the project repeatedly even though that would have terminated 1) the crotchety Stonehill’s own personal quest of many years for a cure and also 2) the lives of many suffering little children.

Harrison Ford’s character does slowly grow spiritually throughout the film because Fraser’s character refuses to have a meltdown and uses the right balance of yin and yang on the brilliant but bad-tempered scientist.

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(I actually knew a scientist just like him, though not as bad, and had to work around his personality. Some scientists can be schizoid, loner nerds with terrible social skills and a huge ego that will not admit a mistake. It has been observed that —  in our egoic world — scientific progress often comes, sadly, not from the old guard admitting a mistake, and accepting the different views of a younger scientist, but from the older generation of scientists, full of their own imagined rightness, quite literally dying out.)

Wiki:

Critical response[edit]

Review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 29% based on reviews from 142 critics and an average rating of 4.88 out of 10. The site’s general consensus is, “Despite a timely topic and a pair of heavyweight leads, Extraordinary Measures never feels like much more than a made-for-TV tearjerker.”[13]

[I disagree]

Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score out of 0–100 reviews from film critics, has a rating score of 45 based on 33 reviews.[14]

Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of “A-“ on an A+ to F scale.[15]

Richard Corliss of Time magazine wrote: “Fraser keeps the story anchored in reality. Meredith Droeger does too: as the Crowleys’ afflicted daughter, she’s a smart little bundle of fighting spirit. So is the movie, which keeps its head while digging into your heart. You have this critic’s permission to cry in public.”[16]

The New York TimesA. O. Scott said in his review: “The startling thing about Extraordinary Measures is not that it moves you. It’s that you feel, at the end, that you have learned something about the way the world works.”[17]

Ramona Bates MD, writing for the health news organisation, EmaxHealth, stated that the film brings attention to Pompe disease.[18] Peter Rainer from The Christian Science Monitor mentions that Big Pharma got a surprisingly free pass in the film and that it will come as a surprise to all those sufferers struggling to get orphan drugs developed.[19]

Jef Akst, writing for the journal The Scientist, stated that the film is a good depiction of the “hard to swallow fiscal issues of drug development.”[20]

In my personal opinion, to be frank, the two child actors who were chosen to be Fraser’s/Crowley’s kids were just not very attractive or cute, and the daughter IMO was a smart-ass to adults. IMO this may have played some role in the film’s poor box office. Audiences have to like or be fascinated by the main characters. In the old days, they used cute blond kids with blue eyes, but not here.

Trailer:

While Jewmerica spends $742 billion on the military, vital medical breakthroughs for suffering people do not happen for a simple lack of money. Here we see the crux of the matter:

“You selfless, heartless machine!”

Wiki:

In 2018, Fraser said that he had been sexually assaulted by Philip Berk, the then-president of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association (HFPA), the nonprofit organization that votes for the Golden Globe Awards, at a luncheon in 2003.

 

The alleged assault, his subsequent divorce, and the death of his mother launched Fraser into a depression that, combined with his health problems, led to a pause in his career.[3][4]

Several publications and social media users interpreted that Fraser was blacklisted from Hollywood because of his accusation against Berk, which Berk denies.[68][69] In the 2018 GQ piece where Fraser first publicly made the allegation, he said “The phone does stop ringing in your career, and you start asking yourself why. There’s many reasons, but was [this incident] one of them? I think it was.”[3]

In contrast, Fraser also clarified in his 2019 appearance on the radio show Sway in the Morning, “I don’t think the HFPA really wield that much power.”[70] In 2022, Fraser told GQ that if he receives a nomination by the HFPA at that year’s Golden Globes for his latest film The Whale, he “will not participate” because of the “history” he has with the organization.[69][71

Early life and family[edit]

Philip Woolf Berk was born to a Jewish family on February 13, 1933, in Cape TownSouth Africa.[9]

In 1955, Berk graduated from the University of California, Los Angeles School of Theater, Film and Television with a Bachelor of Arts degree.[10] In 1954, Berk married Ruth Greenberg, and they have four children.

Career[edit]

Berk worked as a journalist and produced international events as a freelancer. He worked as a writer for publications in Malaysia and South Africa, and was the film critic of the B’nai B’rith Messenger, a Jewish newspaper. In the 1990s, Berk served as secretary of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association.[2]

Berk was a member of the Hollywood Foreign Press Association for 44 years and served terms as the organization’s president and treasurer.[9][1]

Controversies[edit]

[…]

Brendan Fraser sexual assault accusation[edit]

In 2018, actor Brendan Fraser accused Berk of groping his genitals after a luncheon in 2003.[11][7][12] The Hollywood Foreign Press Association commissioned an internal investigation, which concluded that while “Berk inappropriately touched Mr. Fraser, the evidence supports that it was intended to be taken as a joke and not as a sexual advance.”[13] Officials asked Fraser to sign a joint statement about the matter but would not share the complete findings with him.[6] Several publications and social media users interpreted that Fraser was blacklisted from Hollywood because of his accusation against Berk, which Berk denied.[14][15][16] After returning to acting in The Whale in 2022, Fraser declined to attend the 2023 Golden Globe Awards ceremony due to a lack of reconciliation or apology regarding his assault accusations.[17][13]

Berk has described Fraser’s account as a “total fabrication”; yet in his 2014 memoir, he admitted to having groped Fraser “in jest”.[18][19][20]

 

 

2 Comments

  1. An Irish patriot told me about Bram Stoker, the author of Dracula and the idea of drinking blood from young people to rejuvenate aging elites.

    She pointed out stem cell implants that the elites use to rejuvenate themselves today. The Victorian fantasy is today’s technology.

    The medical technology to keep the elites alive for centuries will be denied to the masses. To save the planet from overpopulation a big die-off is needed, and AI will depopulate the planet…. “safely.”

    Firms will still make profits but with a fraction of the overheads and costs. A large section of societies will live off-grid, not
    reliant on the elites’ system as envisaged by Klaus Schwab, Count Nicolas Coudenhove-Kalergi, Soros, and Barbara Lerner-Specter.

    What happened to the other children Epstein supplied? Murdered to shut them up.

  2. Ego-driven male medical doctors gave me false information for years and almost killed me. It was my decision to start seeing female medical doctors that finally led to appropriate lab work. A female medical doctor saved my life in the nick of time.

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