Follow the blue dots?abcdavid01 wrote:That Jim Rogers video...that's what's on my mind. I'm thinking of moving to Asia and starting a family there. Change what you can.
http://www.brookings.edu/research/inter ... -monitor-3
Follow the blue dots?abcdavid01 wrote:That Jim Rogers video...that's what's on my mind. I'm thinking of moving to Asia and starting a family there. Change what you can.
Nice.Teal Lantern wrote: Follow the blue dots?
http://www.brookings.edu/research/inter ... -monitor-3
This sounds to me like someone who gets bits and pieces of information and 'connects the dots' with his imagination like a wild YouTube conspiracy theorist.
Maybe. Or it could be that he knows stuff we dont. You shouldn't assume that if someone knows stuff you don't that he must be imagining things.
The conclusions I heard him making on the video seemed unjustified based on the evidence he presented. He's got a certain perspective on things, and reads information through that filter. I know a little about the sources of one of the specific topics he raised, also. Greeks tried to reinterpret Judaism through their own religious preconceptions, as they did with other cultures. If he had information other than what he shared, he probably took this on face value. His presentation of ideas is not convincing.Winston wrote: ↑February 11th, 2021, 11:00 pmMaybe. Or it could be that he knows stuff we dont. You shouldn't assume that if someone knows stuff you don't that he must be imagining things.
I know someone who knows president Obama. That doesn't make me a former president. How is being an honorary 33rd degree mason a credential of any kind?Btw Jordan Maxwell knew Manly P. Hall, the greatest philosopher of the 20th century and honorary 33rd degree Freemason, who founded the Philosophical Research Society in Los Angeles.
Most people know a lot of stuff other people do not.So you can bet that men like that know a lot of stuff we dont.