Home News Ten Professions React to the ‘2000 Mules’ Affair

Ten Professions React to the ‘2000 Mules’ Affair

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Examples of three professions: (L) a physician, Photo: Inside Edition (C) a journalist, Photo: theherlandreport.com (R) a teacher, Photo: grauerschool.comExamples of three professions: (L) a physician, Photo: Inside Edition (C) a journalist, Photo: theherlandreport.com (R) a teacher, Photo: grauerschool.com

by Mary W Maxwell, LLB                     

Something went terribly wrong many generations ago. As early as 1913, some men surreptitiously took over parts of the US government. They also captured the means of controlling our culture. Most citizens didn’t realize it was happening, but even when told about it, they refused to believe it.

Suddenly we’ve got the proof of at least one aspect of the takeover — the way our hidden masters plop their preferred candidates into office. After watching Dinesh D’Souza’s movie, “2000 Mules,” people naturally say we must crack down on election theft. But that is small beer, tiny beer, compared to what we must do.

There’s also talk of punishing the perfidious bastards who ran the mule operation. (The names Warren Buffet and George Soros have been floated by D’Souza.) That is definitely needed. But I suggest an additional approach.

I ask every one of the professions to ‘fess up and show where they have gone wrong. The controlling of our culture was made easy by the institutionalization of various occupations. Professional associations were formed; these demanded loyalty (read: conformity) of their members. That in itself needs to be broken. Plus, one often sees how an occupation develops its own interests that then conflict with the interests of society.

All professions routinely shout about how they help society. It’s goody-twoshoes city. But we don’t need that boasting now. We need some breast-beating, thank you.

Ten Professions

Let’s pretend to have a breast-beater standing by, from each of the following professions: police, academics, physicians, clergy, lawyers, scientists, city planners, journalists, judges, and schoolteachers. The breast-beaters will share their pain with us and each will take a crack at solving the problem of his/her particular group.

Please listen to their [slightly fictional] stories:

Police. People love me because I look big and strong in my uniform. Shite, I’m virile. Everyone knows I will rescue a damsel in distress. Um. Maybe not, though. We’re instructed to go and grab kids from a home where the mom takes good care of them, if a judge wants the kids to go to the Dad who sexually abuses them. I think we cops should all call in sick when this happens. Some of my buddies say we should go to the judges’ homes and take them away instead. I guess if I did that I would feel really, really big. I think the problem, for most of us cops, is that we are trained at the Academy to refrain from arresting any criminal who waves a VIP card at us — diplomats, judges, billionaires, what have you. Yet everyone is supposedly under the law. I have a Taser and I can dream, can’t I?

(Note: If you’re not up on conspiracy theory, you mightn’t get some of the events these professionals are referring to, but just play along, OK?)

Academics. The tenure system stinks. After seven years of being a low-paid assistant professor you might get a full-professorship with tenure, provided they’ve unequivocally discerned your — shall we say — obsequiousness. Wait — if no faculty member is speaking out about horrendous things, how will the young find out how to speak out? And where is society supposed to get its intellectual geniuses? Who is guarding the tradition of higher learning? Why are the library books by David Hume and Tom Paine and Socrates gathering dust? As for my own manuscripts, the university press’s editor would not even open the envelope — I wasted the postage sending it. Oh well, I will start a YouTube channel and lecture to whomever. Thousands of years of academic work, since the Library of Alexandria, shouldn’t be discarded. I’m going to have my lectures translated into Chinese, too. So there.

Physicians. As a member of the medical profession, I was shocked to see that only 5% or less of our members stood up against the wholly illegal and unethical behavior of such entities as the CDC and FDA during the pandemic. I am mortified that some doctors “sack,” from their practice, families that decline to have their children vaccinated for fear of autism. While reading Mary Maxwell’s book, Consider the Lilies, I cringed at how many cancer cures are available, which we are forbidden to use. I think the Rockefeller gang bribed our state legislatures to make the AMA’s preferred treatment the “best practice” — to which we must kowtow or lose our license. Hey, we can put a stop to this nonsense. Oh, did I say the Covid vaccine was “unethical”? Sorry, I meant to say genocidal.

Clergy. I used to like the song “What a Friend I Have in Jesus.” It is very touching. I’ll sing it for you: “Have you trials and temptations? Is there trouble anywhere? We should never be discouraged. Take it to the Lord in prayer.” Hmm. Is there trouble anywhere? Reportedly we are about to be starved to death. Should I tell my congregation to take that to the Lord in prayer? Pardon me, Lord, but what’s Your track record on helping the starving, other than multiplying the loaves and fishes? I bet You’d prefer these lyrics: “What to do when the nation’s starving, Or if it’s water that we lack? God in Heaven will be delighted, if we take our initiative back.” By the way, when an in-the-know parishioner comes to me looking for solutions, I whip out Revelation 13:7 “Then the beast was permitted to wage war against the saints.” Personally, I’m declaring war against the beast. Take up a sword and join me.

Lawyers. I guess you know why there are lawyer jokes like “What’s black and brown and looks good on a lawyer? A Doberman pinscher.” Or “My divorce was easy. His lawyer got the house and my lawyer got the condo and the two cars.” Actually, our profession deserves jokes way worse than that. We basically have twisted the law 180 degrees. See the trial of Jahar Tsarnaev, per Mary Maxwell’s book “Boston’s Marathon Bombing.” The accused (now anticipating the fry pan) was a sweet kid, age 19, not a terrorist. The Public Defender told the jury “It was him.” (Not the prosecutor, the defender.) And then she failed to cross-examine the flagrantly perjurious witnesses. I hope I was not the only lawyer who wanted to wear a bag over his head. Bright idea: I will lobby for Public Defenders to get paid only when they win the case. I’ll also curtail the SAMs, Special Administrative Measures, that have kept Jahar incommunicado for nine years. His problem was that he was LWM (living while Muslim), you know. Can’t people see through those tricks? By the way, don’t ask the American Bar Association for help. They’re as crim as you can get.

Scientists. You know what? When my Dad was a scientist, around 1960, if you got caught fudging data, you were disgraced for the rest of your life. People would cross the street to avoid having to walk past you. Comedians made jokes about your Pinocchio proboscis. It’s been well established, since approximately Isaac Newton’s day, that science is a search for truth that requires observing the facts of life. But now that I am a practicing laboratory scientist, the boss says “Fudge away!” He tells us what the desired outcome is, and preaches that the ends justify the means. Huh? I want to feed him a little something from my petri dish. No, seriously, what we must do is de-federalize all funding for research. The feds proffer grants for the outcomes they “need,” and they prevent new insights from getting published. Dad also said that fifty years ago scientific findings were open, not “proprietary.” We need to get back to that; it’s crazy not to.

City Councilors. Why did I bother to run for local office? It was quite an effort to win a seat, but I hoped it would bring me power. I see things in my district that could be improved, be it a playground or garbage pick-up. There are only six of us on the council, but wouldn’t you know it, three of them, possibly four, are stooges. They campaigned as “your dear neighbor” but it was the Powers That Be who recruited them. I mean developers. They sit there and vote for denser zoning if it suits the companies that grease their palm. They sell off our district’s assets, such as the library. I have pounded my fist on the desk during meetings, but my opponents look completely unmoved, like zombies. My wife says they’re hypnotized. I will insist that each candidate for office swear under penalty of perjury whom he works for. We should do that for police and judges, too; they’re in the Freemason fraternity and have sworn a super-duper oath. No bloke can serve two masters, right?

Journalists. Hey, ever wonder why the TV newscaster on each local channel says the same thing? The national network gives them the wording and they are not allowed to deviate, other than by wearing a different color dress or tie. Quel deviation! They have to greet each other the same way. “Good morning, James. What can you tell us from the stock market today?” I’d barf if they make me do that, but I’m a print journalist so no need to greet anyone. Still, if I write something colorful, they edit it out. My talent means nothing. The public never gets to benefit from my knowledge of history. They don’t even know I’m a justice warrior, unless they can read between the lines. Face it, I’m a colossal failure. I must chuck it in. Maybe I could join a truth group. I hear Rumble has made a pledge to let it all hang out, and they are at least broadcasting “2000 Mules”. My other option is suicide.

Judges. I was very gratified to read Sherman Skolnick’s book, Ahead of the Parade. Skolnick who was one of the first law activists to make use of the TV time that is mandated for citizen broadcasting. (Yes, and it’s free!) He ran the “Committee To Clean Up the Courts.” Being self-taught in law, Sherman had a better sense of law compared to what a law student would learn in law school. What you learn there is how to cross your t’s and dot your i’s. Perhaps the student gets a few lectures on the Law of Equity, but using Equity will never be allowed by the firm that employs you. See? Anyway, Skolnick recounted the tale of a good judge who phoned him from a pay phone, in tears, to tell how he was being ostracized by other judges for doing the right thing. I’d like there to be a Skolnick we could spill our beans to. Mary Maxwell hints about it in her books Prosecution for Treason and Fraud Upon the Court.

Schoolteachers. Persons under 50 years of age today do not even know of the great respect that each schoolteacher could muster. Or that many female teachers stayed unmarried because their devotion to pupils was maternity enough. I’m 82, still a spinster. I recall that it was around 1990 that I started to feel distressed while driving to the local high school each morning. And that was before someone decided that the kids should watch Nickelodeon news in the classroom “to inspire students by hearing each other’s voices in conversation about the issues of the day.” Oh-oh. And it was before police patrolled the hallways. Unfortunately, I didn’t find Charlotte Iserbyt’s book The Dumbing Down of America, till after I retired. It was crushing to hear that we teachers got manipulated into teaching math wrongly, and to train kids NOT to think, rather than to think. In recent years, the teachers’ unions have been the bullies of teachers. Yes, and a PTA meeting is where parents get bullied. The FBI calls complaining parents “extremists.” You probably know that the feds run our schools by financing the states that use “national standards” for exams. How many states have agreed to it? Fifty. This lunacy has got to stop. My suggestion: move to Fiji with your kids. Or just home school them.

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36 COMMENTS

  1. Dear Mary,
    What about 11.
    Hypocritical lying intellectual deficients simpleton politicians who would screw their grandmothers and child minors for their corrupt miserable futures to sup with their evil overlord to seek soulless significance for one lifetime, then they reap.💁🤡

  2. For the record, the three persons in the photos are Dr Rand Paul, Ms Hanna Herland, and the late John Gatto. I do not mean that they are the “reacters” to the Mules movie. In fact I am not aware of anyone reacting to that movies as such — yet.

    These three persons are simply among the best of their profession: Rand Paul (eye doctor and senator) for having opposed Fauci, Hanna Herland for generally touring the world to find people whose message she can amplify (the proper job of a journalist, no?), and John Gatto for being the schoolteacher with the mostest.

    The only way my article will have an effect is if it reaches the hearts of members of the professions who are unhappy with the Takeover situation but who have not so far spoken out. Come out, please! The world is waiting for your help.

    I think the millions of members of most professions are inhibited by their leadership, all of whom have probably been “muled” into their respective top roles. What a clever arrangement.

    Members also fear the dirty look they will get from colleagues. But so what? Things are being planned that are much worse than a dirty look.

    Much, much, much worse than a dirty look.

  3. I am carrying this over from yesterday’s Comment, as submitted by Diane DeVere. She is quoting “the late” Reine Michaelson. Perhaps not “late”? Diane, has Reine ever been heard from?

    This is about Jeff Kennett a former premiere of Victoria, and Dan Andrews, current premiere of Victoria. I think Reine’s asessmant is correct: Kennett was elite and Dan is a slave. Come to think of it, that distribution of mental alertness is probably present in many organizations:

    dianedevere May 11, 2022 at 10:01 am
    Your question re Andrews and Kennett–both are “programmed” one is a puppet one is a string puller handler – both know the ground rules of Mengele’s Marionette Syndrome. one is of the elite the other of the enslaved both have blood on their hands.

    Both belong to the Mornington Peninsular set. IMHO Jeff and the puppeteers wins the “worstest” award

    Following my earlier reply—we are in a trance hypnotised state

    “The intelligence agencies working through the U.S. government financed drug research. An example is that Dr. Beecher of Harvard University was given via the U.S. Army Surgeon General’s Office $150,000 to investigate “the development and application of drugs which will aid in the establishment of psychological control.” Research into drugs for mind- control began in 1947 at Bethesada Naval Hospital in Maryland. A CIA report described this research as to “isolate and synthesize pure drugs for use in effecting psychological entry and control of the individual.

    “At the California Medical Facility at Vacaville, Dr. Arthur Nugent, conducted research into drugs for mind control under the auspices of the CIA. The Bureau of Narcotics worked with the CIA to establish “safe houses” where drugs which were seized were given to victims. Some other hospitals which began working with the intelligence agencies with dispensing drugs for mind control include Mount Sinai Hospital, Boston Psychopathic Hospital, University of Illinois, University of Michigan, University of Minnesota, Valley Forge General Hospital, Detroit Psychopathic Clinic, Mayo Clinic, the National Institute of Health, and Letterman Hospital in the Presideo, CA.

    “About 90% of the population can be placed into the somnambulistic (the deepest) hypnotic trance possible simply by giving them hypnotic drugs.”

  4. I suppose Australia is a futile place in which to mention this, but while we are promoting our books…

    I wrote a novel that former CIA agent and now author, John Kiriakau described to his publisher as “fascinating” but I doubt it will be published while Rupert Murdoch is still alive because the book provides evidence of his criminality.

    And when I dropped into the brand new Library at the Northern Territory Parliament to collect some prosecution documents, the Library was slammed shut and all public and staff denied entry because “some dangerous fugus was loose”… all this amidst freshly treated documents and books.

    There were two attempts to kill me over the following fortnight, which suggsts I have been uncharacteristically careless. Anyway, my point was, the novel traces the evolution of corruption over fifty years, in pretty much the same career environments listed by Mary: the judiciary, school teaching, social welfare, Aboriginal development, clergy, scientists, doctors, police, and academics.

    Coincidence? Not really. Mary and I saw what everybody else should have been seeing but instead looked the other way. The novel is free as a PDF, at least until the publisher and film maker stamp their rights. For a copy, tonyryan43@gmail.com

    • Thank you Mary for your insights, and thank you also to Tony for your offer. Sounds like it could be a great read 🙂

    • Breakfast at the Gate’s:-
      “the fear was palpable as usual but the Gates children did perceptibly tease when a insect voyeur was noticed on the wall. Dads obsession with mosquitoes now in clear view with all the hand talking, nerd smiling and cardigan selection. This would lead inevitably to more safety data needed on the… whew, only a fly

  5. off-topic,
    When I got covid it mostly resembled a very mild little flu for about two weeks, this was stage 1 when the virus proliferates, stage 2 is when the individual viruses mature and the GMO spike proteins fall off, if you had a lot of virus you subsequently get a lot of spike proteins and the immune system seems to be surprised if they turn up in a different organ each time, because so many diseases seem to be organ specific, you can notice this with some blood-borne infections of the foot which only inhabit a particular part of the foot. So anyway most of my spike proteins as far as I could see did not travel to the gall bladder, appendix, heart or lungs but migrated up to the head, giving me dizzy spells for a couple of days and then a left eye infection which made me highly photosensitive, the immune system handled it in a couple of days, then the spikes seemed to be starting up in the right eye but the immune system sorted that out in a few hours. So this picture (linked) is of more interest to me. It could happen to any organ !!!
    https://newtube.app/user/ClickHere/rFqcHZK
    The point I would wish to underline is that it seems the immune system has to relearn what to do every time the spike proteins (in sufficient number) migrate to and occupy a different area.

    • A special treat for Melbourne, some minions thrown under the bus followed by a great pastiche of Dicktator Dan’s Greatest Hits, protesters kicked in head etc etc., if your ABC TV watching relatives are voting for the major parties this election, make sure they see this

      It looks like the Liberal Party doesn’t even want to win (minority) government, last time they gave it to Julia Gillard and it didn’t help her career much. A few still want to keep their seats of course. Scotty’s line “Elbow just unzips his head and all his ideas fall out on the table” has been the only spark of life in the entire campaign, dominated as it has been by pure gaslighting agendas: Covid-19™, ClimateChange™, Ukraina Inc. and so forth. Our political leadership is insane, this is no hyperbole

    • Joe, if you don’t mind being our guinea pig, would you please research further the notion of an eye infection causing sensitivity to light. I don’t get it. Thanks.

      • I can describe it better, it was like an irritation from a foreign object but there was no foreign object, there was a small amount of discomfort but when the photosensitivity started I couldn’t even look at the TV with my left eye while the right eye was fine. I didn’t drive the car for a couple of days because of that. Then it just cleared up completely in the left eye and started in the right eye, with a feeling like an irritation, but it didn’t get any further. These were the tail end symptoms of my Covid-19™ experience, which altogether went for about 3 weeks, but I didn’t get all my energy back for another 3 weeks.

        • My eye (sclera) was red of course and all I am guessing is it was an abundance of spike proteins because there was nothing else happening. This first-wave bio-weapon is a new field of study. Can’t wait for the smallpox.

          • Joe, maybe “Dry Eye Syndrome” fits in with the discussion? Dry eyes when?
            Old age 70+ (my group)

            Auto immune illness (i.e. Sjoegren’s Syndrome)

            MANY hours daily screen glare (my group)

            Dust from gravel roads, particles from bat colonies drifting your way.

            Me being dragged around the countryside by my Kelpie every day around 200 km per month, made my eyes itchy at times, feeling like dust was stuck under the eye lids. At times needing conjunctivitis treatment (i.e. Chlorampfenicol ) or artificial eye drops. (Tear less eyes are an excellent entry point for pathogens leading to general illness, e.g. airborne virus!)

            I have tested LEF’s Tear support (Maqui berry extract – 60 mg caps/one per day) for one month. Result, increased tear production, eyes feel normal again! 8 out of 10.

            Month 2. Now testing the brand Paradise – Maqui Berry. Too early to tell.

          • My range of very unusual symptoms happened in a sequence over a 3 week period, and it started just after the airports opened in Western Australia and they let the virus in. I had symptoms one after another for 3 weeks and then they all stopped.
            For your itchy eyes try vitamin E capsules, I used to do some welding sometimes many years ago and compromised my eyes but the vitamin E sorts it out, about one capsule a week is enough.
            All the food is depleted in vitamins and minerals now, even if you keep off white bread and sugar, as well we don’t assimilate when our livers are compromised with a history of alcohol and whatever else.

    • Gday Jo, ( and anyone else who may be able to answer )
      “When I got covid”

      im curious. how did you know you had covid?
      Im not trying to say theres isnt something going around, but it has been well established I think that the gold standard PCR tests used early on, and still today despite their acknowleged uselessness in any sort of diagnostics.. and can only amplify whatever theyve been told to look for, and after enough cycles, will find almost everything in anyone?

      I understand as a layman, that there has been no proper isolation from an infected person, ( https://12bytes.org/articles/health/covid-19-coronavirus-information-resources/has-sars-cov-2-been-isolated/ ) so that all they are doing is relying on computer modelling to determine covid from anything else.

      how then does a RAT or Saliva test soert covid from any other corona bug.. and then theres the deltas, omicrons, pokemons variants ( last one, gotta catch them all! ) –

      thankfully ive not been crook in the last few years, ( touch head ) but if i was feeling a bit under the weather, the last thing Id do is go for any of these so called tests as i believe them all to be as useless as each other – hoping someone can tell me how of the mark I am here. ` cheers

      • thankfully ive not been crook in the last few years,
        despite going around hugging and kissing strangers & friends alike – whether they wanted to or not, licking door handles and hand rails, jumping in front of people coughing and sneezing.. etc.

      • I didn’t take any PCR or RAT test before or since, I got a range of symptoms in this order: two-day very mild headache, vomiting, weak stomach, lethargy, very minor wet coughing, a few dizzy spells, coughed up a lump of green stuff, then the eye. The range of symptoms is the clue, it was weird. I had all the Vitamin D, Quercetin and Zinc, plus other stuff, or else it probably would have been worse. I was deliberately trying to catch it and lucky I did because I just wanted to know. Now I’m trying to catch it again but I’m guessing I won’t be so lucky a second time.

    • Ahem.
      Diane, you being you, I watched from 43 mins to 57 mins. Bloke says he saw Ivan Milat shooting. Oh, I mean he HEARD the gunshots after seeing Ivan get out of his car with a gun. What is your point?

      (I know you’ve got a point.)

  6. Hello Mary, Hope you’re doing well. Great article, a unique take on the Zeitgeist. I used to be a school teacher, and so understood this individual take all too well. As for John Gatto, he’s the bomb.

    See below for my latest. It’s pertinent to the above re the profession of journalism. Best, GM

    *All the News that’s Fit to Fake & Hide — Part One: The Slander, Calumny, & Lies of an Old Gray Lady

    https://tinyurl.com/4x7ezp8j

    Stay Tuned for…

    **All the News that’s Fit to Fake & Hide — Part Two: Inside the Citadel of Truth and Certitude (American Media’s Finest)

  7. And for the medical profession, see below ⬇️. 😎🙏👍

    📃Article: Whistling Past the Graveyard Part One: The Crimes & Betrayals of the Medical Establishment, by Greg Maybury. (Perth)

    #DrFauci #Covid #BillGates #BigPharma #WEF #WHO #KlausSchwab #GreatReset #AdverseEvents

    https://tinyurl.com/3t47e99y

    📃Article: Whistling Past the Graveyard Part Two: The High Priests of Public Health & Modern Medicine, by Greg Maybury.

    #DrFauci #Covid #BillGates #BigPharma #VaccineSideEffects #WEF #WHO #GreatReset #AdverseEvents

    https://tinyurl.com/nhjp2s4b

    • Shameless self promotion bro’,
      don’t get me wrong, sometimes like now i can allow warrant, after reviewing of course,
      cheers

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