Dr Simone Gold Court Case

When Hypocrisy overcomes Truth, Justice is Thwarted.

Mind Wandering: 
My conscious awareness is expanding and with it my views will change.
When people allow their thoughts to wander, I imagine this event as follows. 
Let’s say that the thought is like a flash, which is where the word “the thought flash” comes from. it is suddenly there, clear and bright as an Enlightenment In our evening sky, the dark knight, it is illuminated by many small thoughts. As the stars make it happen for us every night… When we plant a thought in our mind, it is a great, enormous, shining star.

If man’s soul, in his mind. is kept pure, then man will seek that positive thought over and over, again and again. Because man has focused this thought, but as soon as man lets his mind wander, the shape of the star also changes. He’s trailing a tale, like a fairy tale. Thus, with each infiltration of a negative thought, the main thought breaks apart. Piece by piece the dream bursts and the rest of what we see, the idea created by this perfect thought, people call “the shooting star”. 

image.png  Sternschnuppe zeichnen – Sterne malen – How to draw a Star – YouTube
In German the word shooting star means STERNSCHNUPPE, and when a German says: I don’t care about, they say: Es ist mir Schnuppe. But I do care about the stars, they show me the way back to our origin, the middle, the center, our heart, the MASTER CELL. the God within us, ALL. I feel humanity sure needs to rise through knowledge but instead of using the voice of the heart, they teach us to think only with our brain. And they try to kill our consciousness of fulfilling our dreams.
 
Now that mother earth is ready for Big Change we should all come together within ONE CONSCIOUSNESS. I AM NOT ANGRY anymore if others copy me or take my words or flip them to they’re point of views. Because I serve only on GODS Wave and that is the point where we all should arrive together. Our connection is one of a enormes tail that is making a MASTER WEB on our planet and once that all important points on earth are connected with the “almost same thought.” ~Giorgia Boschetto

A Nation in Decline. (rumble.com)
At what point is ignorance [common sense] no longer valid [excuse]?
Evil surrounds us.

If America falls, darkness will soon follow.
If America falls, so does the world.

Only when we #stand_together, only when we are #united,
can we defeat this highly entrenched dark enemy.

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Dr. Simone Gold was doing what she legally had a right to do on January 6, 2020.
She was invited to speak on Capitol Hill at a freedom rally. She did not enter the Capital Building of her own free will and did not act out of anger in anything that followed.
Yet she is being treated worse than a common criminal and was sentenced by 
a judge with obvious prejudice. 

Free Dr. Gold RubyRayMedia on Rumble – Search (bing.com)
Published Jul 28, 2022
Length 2:27


“A shocking and unprecedented miscarriage of justice. This despicable act has crossed
the line. J6 is a fraudulent and fascist political weapon, and this absurd prison sentence
is the ominous proof that nobody is safe from the jaws of the corrupted prison system.” 

Dr. Simone Gold will not be silenced. 
Her organization, America’s Frontline Doctors, will continue to
become more prominent and get stronger due to this gross miscarriage of justice.
If the only ammo the enemy can toss at solid, determined true-blue patriots are fines
and unjust jail sentences, it is far from effective. Instead, the weak-minded deep state Democrats’ charges are used as a kindle to fire up the hearts and minds of freedom fighters globally who stand united and stronger than ever. 
Dr. Gold recently recounted her story in an interview with April Moss. And announces a complete program that will offer people a better alternative to the corruption and bias within the healthcare system. This includes the Telemedicine Program already offered at AFLDS and partnering with like-minded physicians to build wellness clinics and eventually build an alternative health care system to the harmful big pHARMa model. 

Dr. Simone Gold recounts her ridiculous court case,
and plans for after serving time. – Search (bing.com)

RubyRayMedia on Rumble
Published Jul 28, 2022
Length 17:15

THE SWAMP’S PREJUDICE AND HYPOCRISY ARE GLARINGLY OBVIOUS!
NOW LET’S FIND OUT WHAT HAPPENED TO THE COLBERT CREW WHO WERE CAUGHT TRESPASSING ON CAPITOL HILL IN JUNE 2022: 
Dr. Simone Gold recounts her ridiculous court case, and plans for after serving time. – Real America’s Voice News (america’s voice.news)

‘Colbert 9’ Capitol Breach Video Released RubyRayMedia on Rumble – Search (bing.com)
Published Jul 20, 2022
Length 1:45
America’s Frontline Doctors
Meet America’s Premier Civil Liberties Organization. America’s Frontline Doctors Want to Fight for Your Medical Freedom. https://aflds.org/

Related: Did Someone Really Die January 6, 2021? New Video Evidence Shows Otherwise
Spain Admits Spraying Deadly Chemtrails as Part of Secret UN Program: One Month after March 2020 Covid-19 Lockdown https://www.globalresearch.ca/spain-admits-spraying-deadly-chemtrails-part-secret-un-program-fight-covid-19/5788746

There is a spotlight shining on the evidence that Jan. 6, 2021 was a set up by the DC swamp leaders to entrap Trump and his supporters in a net they call ‘insurrection.’
The fact is, the plans for that setup began long before 2021. Conspiracy Facts In late 2012, Obama, acting as president, signed a National Defense bill #HR 4310. Unbeknownst to the general public, this bill had a section that legalized propaganda’s use to sway American opinion, all for their good, of course. This is known as Section 1078:..tap on image above for the rest of the story.

Dr. Simone Gold recounts her ridiculous court case, and plans for after serving time. – Real America’s Voice News (america’s voice.news)
May 29, 2022, Spiritually Bankrupt – Bing video
Dr Simone Gold – Totality of Evidence

Late Friday, the FBI finally revealed what more than two dozen agents took
from former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate during a raid on Monday.
According to reports, agents recovered 11 sets of documents that were marked as classified, including some that were labeled “Top Secret.”
That said, Trump noted on his Truth Social platform on Friday that he, as president,
had already declassified the documents that were confiscated by agents. 

FBI Claims Nearly A Dozen Sets of Classified Docs Were Retrieved from Trump’s Estate (conservativebrief.com)
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Emerald Robinson Was Right About the Pfizer CEO (rumble.com)
Breitbart website – Search (bing.com)

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Wade in the Water – The Petersens (LIVE) – Search (bing.com)

image.png
Farmers harvest corn under wind turbines in Massena, Iowa. Tax credits provided by the new law are expected to promote a dramatic expansion of renewable energy in the U.S.

By the time Thomas Edison built the country’s first coal-fired electric generating station
in New York City in 1882, the sooty black combustible rock also was already on its way to becoming the nation’s top energy source. Coal lit lanterns and cook stoves, powered ships and trains, fueled iron and steel production. It would go on to reshape the continent, lighting homes and industries from Fairbanks to Florida. By the 1980s, more than half of all U.S. electricity would come from burning the energy-rich—and planet-warming—fossil fuel.

Now the country is finally preparing to move on.
Thanks to the climate section of the new Inflation Reduction Act, which the U.S. House of Representatives passed on August 12, coal burning, already in decline, may generate as little as 9.7 percent of all U.S. electricity by 2030, just eight years from now, according to an independent analysis. That would mark a 75 percent drop in coal use since 2010. Natural gas use, which had been rising, could also drop 28 percent.
In fact, this new legislation is expected to speed the transition to clean technology so much that non-polluting energy—solar, wind, nuclear power, geothermal energy, hydropower—could supply up to 81 percent of the country’s electricity by the end of this decade, another review finds.

Decades after scientists began warning with increasing alarm that burning fossil fuels
was dangerously heating the planet, a $369 billion response finally squeaked through the U.S. Congress and is headed to the president’s desk. It is the biggest, most transformative climate measure in U.S. history. It should signal, experts argue, the dawn of a new era.
“This is the most consequential piece of U.S. legislation for the climate ever,” says Richard Newell, chief executive of Resources for the Future, a nonprofit energy research organization.
Three independent groups of researchers, using separate computer modelsagree the act could help reduce U.S. fossil fuel emissions up to 41 or 42 percent below 2005 levels by 2030. That’s if President Joe Biden takes no further executive action to reduce emissions, and if states don’t increase their own clean-energy ambitions—yet analysts expect both those things to occur.

The new act alone is not enough to meet the target Biden set of reducing emissions by half by 2030. It’s less ambitious than his “Build Back Better” proposals, which died in the U.S. Senate. But it still provides 80 percent of the cumulative emissions cuts found in those earlier measures.
U.S. emissions were already declining. But thanks to the new law, by 2030 the U.S. can expect to emit roughly a billion tons less greenhouse gases each year than it otherwise would have, according to the independent researchers. As a side effect, there will be less soot coming out of smokestacks and tailpipes as well—and that reduced air pollution will prevent more than 3,500 premature deaths a year, according to one analysis.
The new act is “historic, transformative, imperfect,” the result of lengthy negotiation
and compromise, says Sam Ricketts, a former climate policy adviser to Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s short-lived presidential campaign. Ricketts, co-founder of Evergreen Action, worked behind the scenes to help craft the proposals.
“It is a catalyzing moment,” he adds, “but we have more work to do.”
  
How the new climate law works 
The new act is so big and came together so quickly that experts are still trying to understand how the pieces will interact to reconfigure our energy landscape. Unlike previous failed efforts, the legislation relies primarily on incentives to support clean energy and spur innovation, rather than on penalties to deter the use of fossil fuels. It is largely paid for with a 15 percent minimum tax on corporations.
It subsidizes purchases of electric cars, low-energy appliances, and solar panels, and helps cash-strapped families retrofit homes with heat pumps and electric water heaters. It provides tens of billions of dollars in incentives for manufacturing and deployment of wind turbines, solar modules, batteries, and electric vehicles, and gives tens of billions of dollars to states and utilities to hasten the transition to clean energy.
It focuses on disadvantaged communities through direct grant programs and by setting aside money to clean up ports and heavy industry. It pumps billions into soil enrichment programs and other efforts to promote climate-friendly agriculture, and dramatically boosts tax credits for efforts to capture and store carbon-dioxide from industries or to slurp it from the skies. It funds grant programs to create greener jet fuel.

Related video:  43 per cent emission reduction by 2030 outlined in the climate bill set to pass lower house. – Search (bing.com)

Combined with last year’s $1.2 trillion infrastructure bill, which set aside billions of dollars to upgrade the nation’s electric grid, the Inflation Reduction Act amounts to the greatest infusion of government cash for energy programs since the Manhattan Project. 
The bill is expected to transform the electricity sector most quickly, driving adoption of more solar and wind, but also helping keep nuclear plants in operation. Jesse Jenkins, a climate expert at Princeton University who led one of the independent efforts to forecast the bill’s impacts, projects that the act could prompt emissions reductions of 360 million metric tons a year from electricity generation by 2030. 
But he and other analysts also see it setting the stage for a larger and harder transition in transportation, which since 2016 has been the greatest source of U.S. emissions. Across all transport segments—from delivery vehicles and heavy freight trucks to passenger cars—the legislation could reduce emissions by 280 million metric tons, according to the analysis by Jenkins and his colleagues. That would be the equivalent of getting 60 million gasoline-powered cars off the road. Meanwhile, Rhodium Group, another independent research organization, projects that electric vehicles could account for as much as 57 percent of all vehicle sales in the U.S. by 2030. While supply chain bottlenecks could also cause growth to fall far short of that number, Rhodium researchers expect EV growth will eventually escalate and spill over into other countries. 

How a U.S. law could affect the world
In fact, many elements of the new law are expected to tilt the political and economic landscape globally toward cleaner power and fuels. After decades of promises, these actions should make it easier for the United States to push other countries to follow suit. (The U.S. today accounts for 15 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions, second to China, but its cumulative historical emissions are greater than any other countries.)
By further driving down prices for renewables and clean technologies,
the act also is likely to make it cheaper for businesses everywhere to adopt them.
For example, the price of solar has plummeted 99 percent since the 1970s, after countries like Germany invested heavily in the technology. That change in cost has probably had a far greater impact on global emissions reductions than the actual installation of solar did for Germany’s emissions.
“The transition is already under way, but what the bill does is basically turbo charge the shift,” Jenkins says.
“Businesses that understood the arc of history knew we were going in this direction eventually,” he adds, “But it’s very hard to plan a multinational business when you have half of the states moving very clearly and half of states and the federal government out to lunch. For the first time, we’ve got the financial might of the federal government supporting all the major climate tools.”
After years of stalled efforts to make progress, “it’s hard to find the words to describe just how important this all is,” says Leah Stokes, a political scientist and climate policy expert at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

Yet to appreciate the importance, many Americans need only look out the window or read the news. 

How the law meets the moment
The vote came near the end of an unnerving summer when record-breaking fires raged across Europe and threatened 1,800-year-old sequoias in Yosemite National Park. Thousand-year floods closed northern Yellowstone, killed dozens in Kentucky and Missouri, and stranded tourists in Death Canyon National Park—where people expect to worry about heat stroke, not drowning. Pakistan and India, on the other hand, endured a lengthy, lethal heat wave that scientists said was made 30 times more likely by climate change. And Great Britain hit 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time ever.

Big climate bill: Spending green bucks to spur green energy
By Seth Borenstein, Matthew Daly and Michael Phillis () The Associated Press

WASHINGTON – After decades of inaction in the face of escalating natural disasters and sustained global warming, Congress hopes to make clean energy so cheap in all aspects of life that it’s nearly irresistible. The House is poised to pass a transformative bill Friday that would provide the most spending to fight climate change by any one nation ever in a single push.

Friday’s anticipated action comes 34 years after a top scientist grabbed headlines warning Congress about the dangers of global warming. In the decades since, there have been 308 weather disasters that have each cost the nation at least $1 billion, the record for the hottest year has been broken 10 times and wildfires have burned an area larger than Texas.

The crux of the long-delayed bill, singularly pushed by Democrats in a closely divided Congress, is to use incentives to spur investors to accelerate the expansion of clean energy such as wind and solar power, speeding the transition away from the oil, coal and gas that largely cause climate change.

The United States has put the most heat-trapping gases into the air, burning more inexpensive dirty fuels than any other country. But the nearly $375 billion in climate incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act are designed to make the already plummeting costs of renewable energy substantially lower at home, on the highways and in the factory. Together these could help shrink U.S. carbon emissions by about two-fifths by 2030 and should chop emissions from electricity by as much as 80%.

Experts say it isn’t enough, but it’s a big start.
“This legislation is a true game-changer. It will create jobs, lower costs, increase U.S. competitiveness, reduce air pollution,” said former Vice President Al Gore, who held his first global warming hearing 40 years ago. “The momentum that will come out of this legislation, cannot be underestimated. “

The U.S. action could spur other nations to do more — especially China and India, the two largest carbon emitters along with the U.S. That in turn could lower prices for renewable energy globally, experts said.
Because of the specific legislative process in which this compromise was formed, which limits it to budget-related actions, the bill does not regulate greenhouse gas emissions, but deals mainly in spending, most of it through tax credits as well as rebates to industry, consumers and utilities.

Investments work better at fostering clean energy than regulations, said Leah Stokes, an environmental policy professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. The climate bill is likely to spur billions in private investment, she said: “That’s what’s going to be so transformative.”

The bill promotes vital technologies such as battery storage. Clean energy manufacturing gets a big boost. It will be cheaper for consumers to make climate-friendly purchasing decisions. There are tax credits to make electric cars more affordable, help for low-income people making energy-efficiency upgrades and incentives for rooftop solar and heat pumps. There are also incentives for nuclear power and projects that aim to capture and remove carbon from the atmosphere.

The bill moves to ensure that poor and minority communities that have borne the brunt of pollution benefit from climate spending. Farmers will receive help switching to climate-friendly practices and there’s money for energy research and to encourage electric heavy-duty trucks in place of diesel.

The Superfund program, used to pay for cleanup of the nation’s most heavily polluted industrial sites, will receive more revenue from a bigger tax on oil.

The Rhodium Group research firm estimates the bill would dramatically change the arc of future U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, cutting them by 31% to 44% in 2030, compared to what had been shaping up to be 24% to 35% since 2005 without the bill, said Rhodium partner John Larsen. Clean power on the grid, an upcoming Rhodium report says, would jump from under 40% now to between 60% and 81% by 2030, he said.

“It’s not as big as I want, but it’s also bigger than anything we’ve ever done, ″ said Sen. Brian Schatz, a Hawaii Democrat who leads the Senate climate caucus. “A 40% emissions reduction is nothing the U.S. has ever come close to before. ″

As decisive a change as it is for U.S. policy and emissions, it still does not reach the official U.S. goal of cutting carbon pollution roughly in half by 2030 to achieve net-zero carbon emissions across the economy by 2050.

Not everyone is impressed.
“This law is big for the U.S. but in global terms long overdue,” said Niklas Hohne,
co-founder of the New Climate Institute in Germany. “The U.S. has a long way to
go on climate change and is starting from a very, very high emission level.”

When U.S. historic carbon emissions are factored in, U.S. spending still lags behind Italy, France, South Korea, Japan and Canada, according to Brian O’Callaghan, lead researcher at the Oxford Economic Recovery Project at the University of Oxford. He noted the bill has nothing to fulfill America’s broken promise of billions of dollars in climate aid for poor nations.

President Joe Biden has frequently said America is back in the fight against climate change, but other leaders have been skeptical with no legislation to back his claim.

And there may be disappointment. Americans hoping to buy an electric car may find many models ineligible for rebates until more components are made in the U.S. Local fights over siting new renewable energy projects could also hamper the pace of the buildout, some experts said. Environmental justice communities are concerned they’ll be asked to accept new carbon capture projects.

Republicans, who unanimously opposed the bill in the Senate, say it would add to consumers’ energy costs, with House GOP Whip Steve Scalise claiming it “wastes billions of dollars in Green New Deal slush funds.”

Rhodium’s Larsen, who crunched the numbers in the bill, said it would lead to consumers paying up to $112 less a year in energy costs.

“As long as I’ve been in this game, progress on climate has always been higher costs for consumers. That’s not how this bill works,” Larsen said in an interview.

The Democrats didn’t have a vote to spare in the evenly divided Senate and
Sen. Joe Manchin, a conservative Democrat from coal-producing West Virginia, had long dashed hopes of an ambitious deal. But two weeks ago, faced with public shaming by environmental groups and sharp criticism even from his own colleagues, he stunned Washington by announcing his support for a bill that reduces drug costs, targets inflation and boosts renewables. Since the deal was announced July 27, Manchin has been an avid cheerleader for its passage. Sen. Krysten Sinema, D-Arizona, provided the vital 50th vote, allowing Vice President Kamala Harris to break the Senate tie.

The result is a 755-page bill that spends money without directly taking on fossil fuels, a disappointment to many on the left. Gore said the fossil fuel industry ran a decades-long “deeply unethical campaign to deceive people around the world,” casting doubt on climate change science.

The industry will face higher royalties and new fees for certain excess methane emissions, a potent greenhouse gas — a rare stick amid carrots. But the fossil fuel industry will remain a powerful force and have guaranteed opportunities to expand on federal lands and off the coast before renewables can be built in those places.

Nevertheless, “the undeniable outcome of this will be a real expansion of wind and solar,” said Harrison Fell, a professor focused on energy policy at North Carolina State University.

In 1988 on a steamy summer day, top NASA climate scientist Jim Hansen brought to public attention for the first time the decades-old concept of global warming when he told Congress carbon dioxide was heating up the Earth. That year became the hottest on record. Now, there have been so many hot years it ranks 28th hottest and Hansen has said he wishes his warnings didn’t come true about climate change.

“It’s a mark of shame that it took this long for our political system to react,”
said Bill McKibben, a long-time climate activist, adding that it leaves the fossil fuel industry with too much power. “But this will help catalyze action elsewhere in the world; it’s a declaration that hydrocarbons are finally in decline and clean energy ascendant, and that the climate movement is finally at least something of a match for Big Oil.”

Read more about: Climate Change
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