November 17
We are well aware that many of you are in the process of calling up your nemeses, of bringing into the light of consciousness those beliefs, patterns, thought forms and values which have overshadowed and hindered you for many lifetimes.
.
All around the planet, the membrane which separates conscious from unconscious is thinning and it becomes more and more obvious to many people what it is that they are indeed engaged in struggle with. And these struggles, broken open, revealed for what they truly are, are of a magnitude and power you have not seen before.
.
If this is not happening for you, it may, and soon.
.
*** What is referred to here?
This is about the egoic mind waging WAR on YOU. Your mind out of control, and claiming to be you when the mind should be just a tool you have, not your master.
And to truly enjoy anything that is wonderful, you must be able to turn it off like a radio. End its chatter!
The basic idea about life is this: You are good, and you are eternal, but here on this earth, you must put your principles into action in dealings with other people.
We reincarnate and have many lives — until we live what we know.
***
.
You all need to find your own way in this time. You are the heroes and you alone must choose your course and your stance. If you fail in this, if you lean too hard on anything—a structure, a religion, a person, an outside source of any sort—then you will likely return to the same place again when you have gained the tools you need to do it on your own.
.
And while this is fine and you will each take the time and experience you need in order to achieve the mastery point you have set as your individual goal, there is no harm in gathering the many advantages that are on offer.
.
Today we want simply to remind you that you are already the masters of your own lives. You do not need to become, you need only to remember. We see you as great, branching, sheltering trees—magnifcent, ancient, powerful and deep rooted. You have and are all that is needed. It is your fear and illusion which lead you to imagine that you are nothing more than a skinny sapling, subject to the animals, insects and elements.
.
No, you are source, you are home, you are shelter, you are strength and fortitude, you are wisdom, you are life.
.
When you engage with your worst nightmares, remember please that you have already won, and try not to give it all away when you hear the persuasive voice of fear whispering in your ear. No one gains when you do that. Everyone loses.
.
We love you deeply, we are always here with you, and we are so happy to be able to encourage you to remember the truth of who you are, esecially as the very earth seems to shift beneath your feet.
.
All our love and blessings. (E. West)
…..Pot pourri
— Latvia in Eastern Europe 30 years ago was (((communist))), then it collapsed, and now it’s back, thanks to the same crowd, this time peddling (((democracy)))
.
.
Latvia’s parliament voted on Friday to ban lawmakers who refuse COVID-19 vaccine from voting on legislature and participating in discussions.
.
Latvia, which has one of the lowest vaccination rates in European Union, was the first in the bloc to reimpose a lockdown this autumn as a surge in COVID-19 cases threatens to overwhelm its health system. The restrictions on vaccine-rejecting lawmakers, which includes docking their pay, was supported by 62 of its 100 lawmakers, and will last from Monday until mid-2022. State television reported that nine MPs have rejected the vaccine.
.
https://www.reuters.com/world/latvia-bans-unvaccinated-lawmakers-voting-docks-pay-2021-11-12/
.
Black Farmworkers Say They Lost Jobs to Foreigners Who Were Paid More
Longtime field laborers in the Mississippi Delta said in a lawsuit that they were asked to train [HARDWORkKNG, HONEST, SMART] white guest workers from South Africa before losing their jobs to them.
INDIANOLA, Miss. — For more than a quarter-century, Richard Strong worked the fertile farmland of the Mississippi Delta, just as his father and his grandfather did, a family lineage of punishing labor and meager earnings that stretched back to his enslaved ancestors brought from Africa.
He tilled the soil, fertilized crops and irrigated the fields, nurturing an annual bounty of cotton, soybeans and corn for a prominent farming family. “I’ve been around farming all my life,” Mr. Strong said. “It’s all we knew.”
Black families with deep connections to the Delta have historically been the ones to perform fieldwork. That began to change about a decade ago, when the first of dozens of young, white workers flew in from South Africa on special guest worker visas.
Mr. Strong and his co-workers trained the men, who by last year were being lured across the globe with wages of more than $11 an hour, compared with the $7.25 an hour that Mr. Strong and other Black local workers were paid.
Growers brought in more [white] South Africans with each passing year, and they are now employed at more than 100 farms across the Delta. Mr. Strong, 50, and several other longtime workers said they were told their services were no longer needed.
From the wheat farms in the Midwest to the citrus groves in California’s Central Valley, growers have increasingly turned to foreign workers as aging farmworkers exit the fields and low-skilled workers opt for jobs in construction, hospitality and warehouses, which offer higher pay, year-round work and, sometimes, benefits.
The agricultural guest worker program, known by the shorthand H-2A, was once shunned by farmers here and elsewhere as expensive and bureaucratic. But the continuing farm labor shortages across the country pushed H-2A visas up to 213,394 in the 2020 fiscal year, from 55,384 in 2011.
In the Mississippi Delta, a region of high unemployment and entrenched poverty, the labor mobility that is widening the pool of fieldworkers is having a devastating effect on local workers who are often ill-equipped to compete with the new hires, frequently younger and willing to work longer hours.
The new competition is upending what for many has been a way of life in the rich farmlands of Mississippi. “It’s like being robbed of your heritage,” Mr. Strong said.
In Mississippi, where the legacy of slavery and racism has long pervaded work in the cotton fields, a federal lawsuit filed by Mr. Strong and five other displaced Black farmworkers claims that the new foreign workers were illegally paid at higher rates than local Black workers, who it said had for years been subjected to racial slurs and other demeaning treatment from a white supervisor.
Two additional plaintiffs are preparing to join the suit, which says farmers violated civil rights law by hiring only white workers from South Africa, a country with its own history of racial injustice.
“Black workers have been doing this work for generations,” said Ty Pinkins, a lawyer at the Mississippi Center for Justice, which is representing the Black farmworkers in the lawsuit. “They know the land, they know the seasons, they know the equipment.”
A region steeped in poverty
A vast flood plain, the Mississippi Delta boasts some of the country’s richest soil. It also is the poorest pocket of the poorest state. In Indianola, a town of almost 10,000 about 95 miles north of Jackson, the median household income is $28,941.
The region, which is more than 70 percent Black, remains rigidly segregated. Black children attend underfunded public schools while white students go to private academies. Black and white families bury their dead in different cemeteries.
The Delta is only one of a number of places where South Africans have been hired for agricultural work in recent years. While Mexicans accounted for the largest share of last year’s H-2A visas, or 197,908 of them, the second-largest number, 5,508, went to South Africans. Their numbers soared 441 percent between 2011 and 2020.
Garold Dungy, who until two years ago ran an agency that recruited foreign farmworkers, including for Pitt Farms, the operation that employed Mr. Strong and the other plaintiffs, said South Africans represented the bulk of his business. They are “the preferred group,” he said, because of their strong work ethic and fluency in English.
Under the program, growers can hire foreign workers for up to 10 months. They must pay them an hourly wage that is set by the Labor Department and varies from state to state, as well as their transportation and housing.
Farmers must also show that they have tried, and failed, to find Americans to perform the work and they must pay domestic workers the same rate they are paying the imported laborers.
Both Walter Pitts, a co-owner of Pitts Farms, and the farm’s lawyer, Timothy Threadgill, declined to discuss the farm’s hiring strategy because of the pending litigation.
The reliance on South Africans may reflect the nature of agriculture and the demographics in the Mississippi Delta, compared with places like California.
“In the Mississippi Delta, row-crop production requires fewer workers but workers who have skills to use machinery and equipment,” said Elizabeth Canales, an agricultural extension economist at Mississippi State University. “We hardly have any Latinos in this remote region. Naturally, it’s easier to hire South Africans where language will not be a barrier, especially because in this area, you have a very small Spanish-speaking population.”
The South Africans arrived in the region willing to work weeks that sometimes stretched to 75 hours or more, grueling schedules that might have been difficult for older local workers to maintain, industry analysts said.
There was initially no public controversy over the program in Indianola. Growers in the region described the South Africans as “good workers,” said Steve Rosenthal, a three-term mayor of Indianola who lost his bid for re-election in October. Until the lawsuit was filed, he did not realize that some Black workers had been let go.
“If you have a man that you’ve trained and worked with for years and he knows how to get stuff done,” he said, “how in good conscience can you bring somebody over and pay him more than a man that’s been with you five, eight, 10 years?”
A long family history in the Delta
The Strong family has worked for generations for the Pitts family, which has farmed in the Mississippi Delta for six decades. Richard Strong’s grandfather Henry and grandmother Isadora worked their land. So did his father and his uncle.
Mr. Strong and his brother got hired in the 1990s; he eventually operated not only tractors, but big equipment like combines and cotton pickers. He mixed chemicals to control weeds and pests. He ran irrigation pivots in 19 fields, covering some 3,000 acres. He rose to manager, driving across the farm to verify that everything was in working order.
When he first heard that Africans were coming to work on the farm, about eight years ago, “I didn’t question it. I just went along doing my job,” he said.
But when four white men showed up, they were not the Africans he had expected. Even so, Mr. Strong said, the men, a good 20 years younger than him, were “cool guys.”
He taught the men how to properly plow, how to input GPS settings into the tractors’ navigation systems, how to operate the irrigation system so just the right amount of water was sprinkled on the crops.
One of them was Innes Singleton, now 28, who learned about the opportunity to work in Mississippi from a friend in 2012.
He had recently finished secondary school and did not know what to do next.
He arrived in Indianola in early 2013, and is now earning $12 an hour, making in one week what would take a month for him to earn in South Africa, where the unemployment rate now exceeds 30 percent.
“I learned a lot here,” he said, adding that he sometimes had to work up to 110 hours a week. South Africans now do the main work on the farm, he said, and four locals “help us out.”
The end of an era
After the 2019 season, Mr. Strong traveled to Texas to visit his ailing father-in-law. When he returned, the Pitts Farm truck that he drove had disappeared from outside the house he had rented from the grower for about a year. He was told to vacate and was not offered work for the 2020 season.
A year later, others were let go, including his brother, Gregory, who said he had devoted much of his life to Pitt Farms.
“I gave them half my life and ended up with nothing,” he said. “I know everything on that place. I even know the dirt.”
“I used to work rain or shine or anything,” he said.
But before the 2021 season began, he said, one of the Pitts owners told him “he didn’t need me no more.”
*** How about “any” more?
Or, sorry, I forgot — Blacks have only been in this country since 1619. They’re stil learning English. 😉
***
Since the lawsuit was filed, other Black workers have come forward, saying they had labored in the fields and catfish farms of the Delta before unfairly losing their jobs, Mr. Pinkins, the lawyer, said.
In late October, as the harvesting season came to a close, eighteen-wheelers in Indianola rumbled down the highway, loaded with bales of cotton. Driving alongside the farm where he spent 24 years, Mr. Strong scanned the rows of neatly carved earth as far as the eye could see. “I put in all that,” he said, with a certain pride.
Then a tractor passed by, a young South African man at the wheel, and Mr. Strong looked away. “I miss working the land,” he said.
Kitty Bennett contributed research.
[end]
Gee, why would white cotton growers not want Blacks any more? They’ve only given them a chance for 402 years!
Why would they want to bring in white people like this?
…..Recent donations
— 12 November 2021 another 300 euros (same in US dollars) from the heroic M in France, a working man, btw, not some millionaire!!!!!
.
— 10 November 2021 250 euros via PP from C in Germany
— 8 November 2021 $40 cash from S in Ontonagon, Michigan
— 6 November 2021 300 euros via PayPal from M in France
:
AN OLD SYMBOL OF FRANCE IS THE WILD BOAR
— 2 November 2021 $10 in cash from S in Ontonagon, Michigan
— 31 October 2021 300 euros via PayPal from M in France
— 30 October 2021 $50 via PayPal from V in Denmark
Him in a previous life, also good at getting donations
— 27 October 2021 $400 cash from fmr Marine Corps officer P in Florida, a donor and friend for twelve years
— 25 October 2021 600 euros from C in Germany
— 24 October 2021 300 euros from M in France
— 22 October 2021 $200 loan to keep the site going forgiven by P in Florida
— 20 October 2021 $200 via US Postal Service money order from K in Massachusetts plus the cost of $8.70 in priority-mail postage
— 18 October 2021 300 euros from M in France
— 10 October 2021 300 euros from M in France
— 6 October 2021 $50 cash from P in Florida
— 2 October 2021 300 euros from M in France
— 2 October 2021 $50 via PayPal from V in Denmark
— 1 October 2021 $200 loan from P in Florida
— 25 September 2021 300 Euros via Paypal from M in France
— 18 September 2021 300 Euros via Paypal from M in France
— 14 September 2021 $50 via Amazon gift card from T in Florida
— 11 September 2021 300 euros (same in US dollars) from M in France
— 9 September 2021 $300 via Amazon gift card from J in Nevada
— 5 September 2021 300 euros (same in US dollars) from M in France
— 31 August 2021 500 euros via PayPal from C in Germany
Jew-owned Swedish media and SAS (Scandinavian Airlines) run ads saying that Swedes never invented anything and essentially don’t exist as a people, and they encourage immigration of more brown-skinned invaders:
https://sputniknews.com/20211116/survey-finds-blacks-overrepresented-in-swedish-tv-advertising-as-media-focus-on-white-majority-1090766321.html
https://sputniknews.com/20200213/sas-re-launches-disgusting-ad-amid-mounting-controversy–video-1078301407.html
I have to say though, that Swedes in general seem to be very liberal, so they likely brought this Jewish-engineered plague of gimmegrants on themselves. Years ago, I worked with an American of Swedish ethnicity who once chastised me for daring to express a negative view of blacks. Hopefully he will get mugged and/or killed by one as his karmic repayment.
Captain Sweden saves the day:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/zItrwNm0y2cA
https://funnyjunk.com/Captain+sweden/funny-pictures/5302944
So this Mr. Strong, the black cotton-picker, complains about white South Africans taking his job?
Would he ever take legal action against European governments that replace indigenous Whites with black/brown gimmigrants?
No he won’t.
When blacks/browns are benefiting from discrimination and inequality, that’s OK.