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Beer brand Heineken has found itself the subject of sustained backlash on Twitter as it becomes an inadvertent lightning rod for anti-vaxxers.
The Dutch brewer precipitated the controversy after sticking its neck out to strike a staunchly pro-vaccination stance for its latest advertising campaign ‘The Night Belongs to the Vaccinated’, in which seniors are depicted partying like it’s 2019.
With this bold move, Heineken has become one of the first brands to openly position itself in the pro-vaccination camp, giving its brand a shot in the arm while risking the ire of vocal critics of the health program – who duly amassed on social media to vent their fury.
Over the course of his retirement, it became widely known that Stubblebine maintained a keen interest in psychic warfare throughout his service. He sought to develop an army of soldiers with special powers, such as the ability to walk through walls.
In addition to alleged security violations from uncleared civilian psychics working in Sensitive Compartmented Information Facilities (SCIFs), Stubblebine offended then-U.S. Army Chief of Staff General John Adams Wickham, Jr. by offering to perform a spoon-bending feat at a formal gala; Wickham associated such phenomena with Satanism.
A character ("General Hopgood") in the 2009 film The Men Who Stare at Goats — a fictionalized adaptation of Ronson's book — is loosely based on Stubblebine as commander of the "psychic spy unit" (portrayed in the film) who believed he could train himself to walk through walls.
Albert "Bert" Newton Stubblebine III (wiki)
Viewing an electron like this means that if you throw one at a barrier, like a wall, there is always a tiny probability that it will end up on the other side. This theory is called quantum tunneling, and yes, we realize it’s complicated. But explaining it any more would probably just lead to more confusion, and it’d take longer before we can walk through walls
The bottom line is that quantum tunneling could, theoretically, allow all the particles in our bodies to pass through barriers. And before we know it, everyone could be walking through walls.
The Physics of Consciousness by Evan Harris Walker makes a great case for consciousness as a property of electrons 'quantum tunneling' through the brain. If you haven't heard of quantum tunneling, this is where the electrons in atoms are all the time blipping out in one location and blipping back in at another location without ever crossing the space in between. You probably know it as a 'quantum leap.
This means that the particles in every atom of your body are disappearing and reappearing all the time. This is not just a wild theory. Quantum tunneling has been verified many times experimentally and is a known fact, though not many people really understand that this is how reality actually works. Bits and pieces of us are literally disappearing and reappearing all the time, only at a speed much faster than we are able to perceive. The truth is we're just not all here.
So where do these particles of us go? The Schwartzschild quantum lattice theory suggests that they go through tiny 'black holes' perforating space, passing through into some other dimension and then returning, something like a sewing machine. According to Walker, our consciousness is a result of this quantum stitching process, emerging as quantum interactions in the 'cleft' of neural synapses that 'collapse the wavefunction vector' many times a second to create self-awareness. Consciousness and 'will' are then defined as electrons tunneling in and out of our space-time and bouncing back and forth inside our skull as a standing wave while skipping across our brain's neural net to convert possibility into reality. The choices for what will be real is made between the quantum of time the electrons disappear and reappear.
Proceeds of slaveryEdit
When Gerard Heineken decided to buy Den Hoyberch (The Haystacks) brewery in 1864, he wrote to his mother Anna Geertruida van de Paauw Heineken to ask her for the money. Anna Geertruida, a "plump widow", had acquired her fortune from a "previous husband’s family in West Indies plantations" (from The Heineken Story by Barbara Smit).[page needed] Anna Geertruida's first husband was Pieter Jacob Schumacher van Oudorp (1804–1833).[39] The Schumacher family owned a plantation in Dutch Guyana called Schumacher’s Lust, according to records held at the UK’s National Archive [40][41] After Pieter Schumacher died, Anna was remarried to Cornelis Heineken and had four children, one of which was Gerard Heineken. While other brewing companies have acknowledged their links to slavery,[42] Heineken’s official history makes no acknowledgement that its origins stem from the proceeds of slavery.[43]