You Can Deal with Only So Many Issues. Which Ones Are Best? - Granite Grok

You Can Deal with Only So Many Issues. Which Ones Are Best?

Choice Choices

This article is for persons who are discouraged by the fact that new burdens are added every day to the list of which issues should occupy one’s time and energy. Perhaps you should write down what it is that you hope to accomplish and note how much effort you’ve been putting into this or that.

Was it a good investment? Should you shift gears?

Of course, this article is also for me. I’m trying to decide what to focus on henceforth. Looking back over the last eight years, what would I have done differently?

False Flags

A lot of my time in the past eight years went into writing books about three false flags. At the time of Jahar Tsarnaev’s trial in 2015, I started to write about the Boston Marathon bombing case. Gahd, it was so easy to see from court transcripts that lawyers and judges were having a ball, making a fool of the citizenry. And The Boston Globe needs to be awarded a gold medal for keeping a straight face.

Then, in 2017, having attended the relevant Inquest hearings of the “Sydney siege,” I put together a book that proved (in my opinion) that the 2014 hostage-taking episode in the Lindt Cafe was fraudulent, a psy-op to train Aussies to fear Muslims and hate “terrorists.” Like the Boston case, it was pure, pure Hollywood. I’d hate to think how many cops had to play a stand-down role. (Don’t they get sick of this? Do the wife and kids know Daddy is faking his heroism?)


We want to thank Dr. Mary Maxwell for this Contribution – Please direct yours to Editor@GraniteGrok.com.
You can review our ‘Op-Ed Guidelines on the FAQ Page.


More recently, in 2021, a friend challenged me to prove that the Sandy Hook massacre actually did occur, as I claimed it did. Thanks to the friend, I was forced to look at the several court cases involved. Oh no! Not another legal hoax! Yes, it was a hoax, and yes, Alex Jones is playing a part in it even now, with the nonsense about his having to pay millions to families for “defamation.”

So, should I have turned off the tap in 2015 and not wasted a lot of water to prove that false flags are false flags? Yes, I now believe that I mis-invested my time. Especially as my work has never been taken up. As far as I know, no one is promulgating my books. The majority of people are still happy to believe that the Marathon bombing, the Sydney siege, and the “killing” of 20 children at Sandy Hook School were done by, respectively, Tsarnaev, Monis, and Adam Lanza. (Those last two guys have absolutely no verifiable bio.)

I’m not sorry for contributing what I could to the outing of psyops, but eight years down the drain means eight years in which I could — maybe — have done something different to help society. (I’m Catholic, ever fueled by guilt, thank God!)

Granted, the false-flag work did provide me with training and confidence-building, for the tackling of other issues. I had no trouble jumping right into the psy-op known as vaccinating for Covid and the “Hollywood” production known as Jan 6. No trouble at all; the media’s perfidy is as plain as the nose on your face. As is Congress’s perfidy, likewise.

Oh My, Both the Media and Government Are Against You

Well, then, here is the real story that can be derived from my eight years of running around as a truther and perhaps your eight years, or more, of doing similar. It is that we live in a country (for me, that means both the US and Australia) where the institutions that should do the heavy lifting for truth — the media and the government — are not doing that. I can put it this way: Rupert Murdoch sucks.

Okay. Rupert Murdoch is the media. But who is the government? Why, it, too, must be Rupert Murdoch!

How the hell did it take me eight years to notice this? Maybe the fact that Rupe’s two jobs have two separate labels deceived me. After all, our brain is wired to grant reality to any entity that has a name — media, government, hosiery, whatever.

This is normally a good thing — naming is essential for physical objects. If you learn that there is a species of mammal, the kangaroo, whose baby, known as a joey, rides around in its mother’s pouch, you now have an education about that, even if you have never seen a joey in real life.

It works for abstractions, too. You can get a taste of such abstract things as rivalry, treason, peace, frugality, or “mafia-like arrangements” as soon as their label is invoked.

The Changeover

My generation grew up learning about government — not the Rupey kind. Thus, we became aware of such realities as following one’s oath of office and respecting the Constitution’s balance of power. Wait. Those things are abstractions. But are they real? The abstractness of a concept is not the measure of its reality. What I’m trying to get at here is that our brain, upon hearing a term, calls up the image that we have been taught.

Then you need to ask the question: Is the label misleading? Should we now be lulled into thinking that officials obey their oath of office just because the abstraction is present in our cerebrum? I’m fairly sure that, decades ago, it was standard practice — members of government felt it necessary to abide by their oath. Somehow, that practice is not compelling anymore.

Today, members of the government do what they do by absorbing the prevailing office culture. In actuality, they are obeying a new boss — whom I identify roughly as “Rupert Murdoch.” Mr. Murdoch, or a group of men like him, may have been able to organize this whole changeover in subtle ways. (Ask Diane DeVere about Tavistock.) They have earnestly studied human nature and know how office-culture works. They also are dab hands at bribery and intimidation.

If an old-fashioned American comes along now and yells, “We’ve got to follow our oath of office,” he or she may look a bit stupid. People will say, “Come on, man, get with the times. Those constitutional things don’t work anymore.”

In fact, someone started a group called Oath Keepers. It’s for soldiers who are proud that they swore an oath — as was required at their initiation ceremony — to defend the US Constitution against all enemies, foreign and domestic [read: Rupe]. Oh, and swore not to commit war crimes. The Oath Keepers also invited police persons to join, although a cop’s oath is more geared to serving the people.

Then, lo and behold, some Oath Keepers showed up at the January 6, 2021 “event” at Capitol Hill and were arrested for sedition and other dubious crimes related to protesting dishonest government. Immediately, they were trashed by the mainstream media. You have to really concentrate to stop yourself from believing that the Oath Keepers are something other than stupid, rough, selfish, and — wait for it — disloyal.

The leader is presently serving a long sentence for “Jan 6.” Hey, doesn’t that prove that a court had good evidence and persuaded a jury of it? Oh dear, there goes that label-matching process of your cerebrum again. “Court” and “evidence” make you think something nice happened—that warm, fuzzy feeling.

No. Court and evidence are now part of Rupe’s toolkit for achieving what he wants. They are not what you think. Ask me about it! — Jahar, Monis, Adam. Everything Rupe wants, he can get from a court, including the highest courts. I hope I’m not being too disrespectful when I say that I look upon the US Supreme justices as the Praetorian Guard of the globalists.

If you want to know what I think of Australia’s High Court, please see my chapter on the Argyle case (in my 2023 book “Society Is the Authority”) for the secret token that allows all judges to participate in child trafficking.

My Christmas Gift to Myself

That settles it. I’m poised to abandon the false-flag territory for the new concept: “Rupe is not just the mainstream media; he is also the US government, at least for the moment.”

Ah, I’m writing this on December 24, 2023, so I see that I’ve given myself a Christmas gift — a new theme to work with. Perhaps I’ll gift-wrap it and put it under the tree and surprise myself in the morning.

Sadness: I see that the man on Loudon Rd who sells Xmas trees near Everett Arena still has a huge number of them left. I imagine it’s because people are TOO SAD to celebrate.

Note to fellow GraniteGrokkers: Disquis does not allow me to comment. So I do hope for your comments, but won’t be able to reply. My email is MaxwellMaryLLB@gmail.com. Danke.

Mary Maxwell is a candidate in the 2024 FITN primary.

Reminder: The views and opinions expressed in Op-Eds are those of the author and may not reflect the opinion of GraniteGrok.com or its authors.
>