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Showing posts from April, 2021

French Generals Issue a Cri de Guerre, Preparing France for Civil War Against Migrants

This Blogger’s brother was in Paris, when Paris waited for French Foreign Legion paras to fly from Algiers to overthrow the French Republic.   That attempted coup was foiled when Charles de Gaulle went on television, in his World War II general’s uniform and summoned up the mystic chords of memory.    General Jacques Massu, the para general who had defeated the Arab revolutionary organization, the FLN, in the legendary Battle of Algiers, remained loyal to De Gaulle. France was saved, without a Civil War.   That was then; De Gaulle and Massu are both dead.    In 2021, the Generals are back, to save the French Republic, seemingly by any means necessary.   They have published what is basically a pronunciamiento,    a cri de guerre, for Civil War against Islamic migrants.  They intend to save France from the    Islamic migrant hordes, living in  banlieues, by blood and fire, by violence.   So the race is on, which republican democracy will get to Civil War first, because of migration, Fran

God the Prankster Pranks Physics Again, MUON g-2 Wobbles

One of the few joys in living in this materialistic, corrupt, pedestrian, dull, uninspired, shrill and superfluous epoch is watching, on seemingly a daily basis, the fundamental foundations of cosmology, the science of physics, being debunked, with every new scientific discovery; leaving physics more mystified and confused than before.   It is as if someone is jerking physics around, belittling it, and holding it up to ridicule.   Could it be God the Prankster?   This week it is MUONS playing havoc with physics.   “ On Wednesday, April 7, the Muon g-2 Experiment at Fermilab released its eagerly awaited first result. In the experiment, muons (like electrons but heavier) race around the 150-foot circumference magnetic racetrack, wobbling as they go like tops slowly spinning on their axes.   Quantum mechanics allows for "virtual" subatomic particles to ever so briefly come in and out of existence and affect the wobble of muons. The Fermilab experiment measures this wobbling with