Our First ‘Meanwhile’

Just came here from the last post and want to thank those who commented, i.e., I enjoyed the comments! Thanks. I’ll keep posting about Spacex. Someone has to.

Meanwhile.

From now on, when a post starts with ‘Meanwhile’ or when ‘Meanwhile’ appears by itself (like the above line) it means I am going to describe something… fishy… I just noticed, meaning a fact or circumstance that either contains a hidden paradox or that is just flat untrue and no one seems to have noticed before (if they have noticed, I haven’t noticed that they noticed), and which has nothing to do with anything else. If you get my drift. 

I arrived a couple days ago at Winchester Bay, Oregon, and snapped this one with my IR camera. By the way! I got my money back from the crooks who didn’t do the work properly. Complained to Visa like one of you suggested.

Examples? The fact that The Pale Blue Dot is a fabricated photograph. Ditto The Falling Man. Or I might have noticed that there are no photographs of real carnage from the Civil War. Or I might have noticed that there are often scenes in movies that contain black and white checkerboard patterns.

Addendum: I bring this one up because last night I viewed Scorcese’s After Hours (one of my favorites of his) and noticed that checkerboard patterns are all over the place, which makes sense because of the bizarre, occult memes with which the movie is rife. This is ‘fishy’ because IMO it is a PTB ‘wink’ meaning ‘ain’t we (‘we’ referring to… those who have bunkers to run to when the next cataclysm looms) clever!’.

Today’s ‘Meanwhile’ popped up yesterday (a busy day) when I was looking at images of the megafauna that became extinct around the time of the cataclysm of the Younger Dryas, i.e., about 12,000 years ago. Take a look at the image of the saber tooth tiger (Smilodon). Notice anything fishy about this animal?

According to Wiki and other sources, Smilodon was very common in what would become known as the Americas. They say that hundreds of Smilodon fossils were extracted from the La Brea Tar Pits in downtown Los Angeles. 

Smilodon fossil skull.

Fishy? Let me rephrase, meanwhile — as an in-your-face hint — showing you a Smilodon fossil skull. Give it a close look.

Notice the problem?

How the fuck is this animal supposed to eat? Or, for that matter, how is it supposed to grab prey and bring it down or cause serious damage?

Wiki (etc.) says Smilodon could open its mouth to 120 degrees but this would still only allow a couple inches from the tip of the tusks to the the lower jaw. Do you see the problem now? Try picturing how it would get food past those canines, let alone bring down a big antelope or whatever. 

A saber tooth lion.

There were apparently lions and other big cats with this dental arrangement all over the ancient world. Like saber tooth lions. The tips of the big canines aren’t even sharp and with no knife-edge what sort of damage could it do to its prey? Not much, even if it managed to puncture a hole. If it did grab something, the long canines would fuck up leverage — the cat’s head would be forced way back — making this ‘adaptation’ less than useless.

But what’s my point? What are the implications? First, I have to ask myself why I never noticed this obvious problem before. I’ve likely seen hundreds of images like the ones you see here. 

How about you? You ever notice this? 

The other implication is this: In reality, these animals never existed. They are made up. Smilodon? This is a wiseacre name if I ever saw one, concocted by one of the scumfucks  in charge of fucking with us. 

Addendum: Consider ‘Smilodon’ another ‘wink’, like the above-mentioned checkerboard patterns from After Hours, i.e., not just an inside joke but also a way of further insulting us, plus, as a bonus, an indication of how dumb the average Joe/Josephine really is, which, I suspect, is still another excuse for pulling moves that cull our numbers (the last major move being COVID and its deadly vaccine): at a certain point of stupidity (for not noticing) we cease being human. And in this case there’s a certain occult edge (turn the cat’s head upside-down and you get horns), which Freemasons and the like always love.  

The final implication of course is the question of How many other ‘extinct’ animals are there that we have been told about that likewise never existed? Do you think they just made up one? 

What am I getting at? That dinosaurs never existed? I dunno. Maybe. As I’ve mentioned before, dinosaurs, meaning the big ones, could not have existed in today’s gravity. In fact, this is a big one, meaning another incredibly obvious ‘fishy’ piece of business that no one ever talks about.

Addendum: If you don’t recall my dealing with this go to this post and scroll down a bit.

Something fishy here?

Anyway, another of the megafauna that supposedly were wiped out around 12,000 years ago were giant beavers. We’re talking’ beavers the size of Volkswagens! And poof!, gone after the big flood. But wait a minute. We still have beavers; they are just way, way smaller. How did that work? In only 12,000 years (a lot less, actually), giant beavers shrunk down from 1,000 pounds to 30? How did that happen, given the way evolution is supposed to work?

Somehow, the talk about giant beavers reminded me of this from a couple nights ago on the road.

Were small beavers there all the time, building cute little dams while their gigantic cousins constructed logs-and-mud Hoovers? Makes no sense, does it?

Okay, so this is our first ‘Meanwhile.’ Whaddya think?

Allan

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