Alison McDowell podcast: Selling RFK Jr. on Next Gen Nuclear – A Critical Analysis of Matthew Ehret and Fox Green’s “Cheap Energy” Pitch
There is a lot to learn from Alison McDowell, wrenchinthegears.com, so I started listening to her podcast, which can be found at wrenchinthegears.com/wrench-in-the-gears-podcast-downloadable-audio-of-select-talks, Apple and Spotify.
I listened to two episodes:
Episode 77 – Selling RFK Jr. on Next Gen Nuclear – A Critical Analysis of Matthew Ehret and Fox Green’s “Cheap Energy” Pitch – Part 1
I’m familiar with Matthew Ehret (see canadianpatriot.org and risingtidefoundation.net), and Alison McDowell brings up many points that he and his guest do not.
Note that Bill Gates, in his infamous 2010 TED Talk, in which he admits to a whole range of agenda items (my commentary), also talks about a new type of nuclear power technology.
I’m hoping RFK Jr. will turn out to be not so bad, but … there are problems with following “heroes” in the alternative media. We are not getting the whole story from most sources and we end up falling into information echo chambers where we just hear what we want to hear. We should be learning from different sources, ideally original ones, and questioning everything.
I agree with most of what Alison McDowell is saying as far as what I’m familiar with. A very destructive kind of “optimization” is one way of looking at the Brave New World model. However, on the topic of depopulation, I think it’s clear that Bill Gates, in the same Ted Talk I mentioned (https://www.ted.com/talks/bill_gates_innovating_to_zero) hints at a greatly reduced population.
Alison’s comments on the establishment’s focus on radioactive materials reminds me of the impression I had when reading Julian Huxley’s essays in “Evolutionary Humanism” (1964) in which he takes an interest in the effects of man-made radiation on human reproduction.