Here’s a summary of the text with the requested annotations:
The author is undergoing a significant move, which will limit their writing and email responses until mid-July. They are seeking guest submissions to fill the gap and will resume writing and fulfilling book orders afterwards. The author is not publicly sharing their new address but will provide it for PO donations via email. Their phone number remains for clients only.
The author then critiques reporting on the Jan. 6 event, claiming to have predicted key details months in advance. They assert that the FBI was framed as the fall guy and that the Pentagon, specifically the Air Force, likely orchestrated the event, possibly in conjunction with the CIA. They refer to a detailed paper for more connections among individuals involved, including Ashli Babbitt, Harry Tarrio, John Sullivan, Larry Brock, Thomas Caldwell, Aron Mostofsky, and Kenneth Harrelson.
A personal update is provided regarding cadmium poisoning. A hair test revealed high cadmium levels, and the author is undergoing chelation. While suspecting dishes, not paints, as the source, the extent to which it contributed to five years of symptoms (morning nausea and fatigue) is unknown. The move to a lower altitude may help. The author dismisses intentional poisoning with cadmium but cautions that if they die under suspicious circumstances, it may not be accidental. They emphasize their careful handling of materials like lead paint, citing recent low lead test results.
The author will append short updates to this paper and continue commenting on CuttingThroughtheFog.
In a first addendum, the author connects a recent Chicago shooting that claimed four lives to their own names, noting that victims had surnames Mathis, Miles, and Williams, suggesting a pattern of “homages” to them by “fake event writers.”
A second addendum on June 23 discusses Alex Jones and a poll on John McAfee’s “death.” The author suggests McAfee, like Jeffrey Epstein, faked his death, implying both were in jail cells when they “died.” They also mention reports of riots in Sweden, questioning the mainstream narrative as “fake news” and similar to staged riots intended to create fear and division.
The author then criticizes a Supreme Court ruling favoring a high school girl disciplined for a Snapchat post, arguing the decision is wrong because she wasn’t censored. They believe the court is prioritizing trivial cases over more important issues like censorship by Twitter, Facebook, and Google against prominent figures, and the refusal to hear cases related to vote fraud, Dominion, or mandatory vaccinations. The author concludes the Supreme Court is “owned and completely useless,” part of “government theater.”
An addendum on July 5, 2021 points out Paul Watson at Infowars selling events like the Manchester Arena bombing, Paris Massacre, and French beheadings as real, despite their alleged falsity. They note that Infowars used to expose false flags but rarely does so now, questioning why. The author also criticizes Watson and Jones for not acknowledging that the Jan. 6 event was staged, despite admitting FBI agents were present. They question why crisis actors or FBI agents would be jailed.
An addendum on July 8, 2021 presents FBI data showing mainstream media exaggerates mass shooting numbers by twelve times. The author reiterates that many such events, including those in Chicago and New York, are staged by intelligence agencies to create fear and push a pro-police agenda. They further claim most gang shootings are also staged, with gangs acting as CIA fronts involved in CIA-managed drug trafficking, aiming for monopolies that would negate gang rivalries and violence. The author asserts that BLM and Antifa violence, like gang violence, is manufactured and over-reported to create fear, chaos, and promote increased budgets for police, courts, and jails. They state that 98% of news is manufactured.
The author then elaborates on Gary Webb, calling him a “spook” whose death was faked, but whose central thesis on CIA involvement in drug trafficking remains true. They mention Webb’s work on the “Coal Connection” and his lawsuits against newspapers. Webb’s reporting for the Mercury News, owned by Knight Ridder (a CIA front with Lockheed links), is discussed. Maxine Waters is mentioned as a supporter of Webb, accused of pushing “race wars for the CIA.” The author notes The Washington Post, The New York Times, and The Los Angeles Times gave Webb’s story publicity, which is atypical for inconvenient truths, and that Jerome Ceppos, Mercury News editor, later turned on Webb. The author concludes that Webb’s story’s continued promotion after decades, via Hollywood films and TV series like “Kill the Messenger” and “Snowfall,” indicates it was strategically managed.