I read a fascinating book this week that I thought was very revealing about the field of anthropology by a professor of that field called Weaponizing Anthropology, which is about how the CIA has infiltrated that science and the colleges that teach it to shape narratives to build a social narrative. The book by David Price, I think, explains a lot about just how wrong it is that we establish what we think of as a fact. And it reminded me of the problems revealed during Covid from the Lancet in England, a very respected medical publication, where Bill Gates and Dr. Fauci found ways to manipulate the important news of hydroxychloroquine and Ivermectin to prevent and treat Covid-19. And to take away that hope from millions of people suffering from the artificial virus, let loose from a lab in China to spread around the world, from gain-of-function research. Regarding the field of anthropology and the related sciences, I have complained a lot about some of the ridiculous assumptions made about the mound building culture in the Ohio Valley for instance that steers concern more toward a hunter and gatherer mindset of gradual evolution when in fact we are looking at a Vico Cycle of continued decline and rebirth from cultures extending deep into the past, well beyond the Archaic Period. And recently, we learned that peer reviewers for four of the top medical journals have received payments from drug and medical device manufacturers totaling around 1 billion dollars from 2020 to 2022. This has opened the door to what big business it is to be in the peer review business. People tend to trust information that is associated with an expert opinion. But the deceit is that when that expert is paid to have an argument that the people writing the checks want them to have, the information is meaningless. And in the context of the value of helpful information, we are finding that what we assume to be a reality is, in truth, only shaped by those paying for the definition of that reality, which endorses a need they have for mass public opinion to shade in their direction.

This morning, I had 337,000 unread emails, and about a quarter of those are from people who offer peer review services and want me to pay them for their expert opinion to lend to the credibility of my material. Or, they want me to review their material and are willing to pay for it. It is an enormous business, and many people make a lot of money offering nothing more than an opinion, and the fee for being an expert in a field is very valuable. But I don’t get into that money game for many reasons. For a long time, I have not trusted peer-reviewed opinions for many reasons. This recent information from the Weaponizing Anthropology book and this report on the peer review contributions to the top four medical journals has only solidified my opinion. Which is sad because I would like to see the system work. I read a lot of information, and I have my trusted sources. I think the information is more credible when I see their name next to an article or a book. But that’s how this whole racket got started in the first place. Trust was for sale, and there were a lot of evil characters in the world willing to exploit it for all kinds of nefarious reasons. That was indeed happening in the medical field. And it was happening in large doses in anthropology and archaeology. Those who pay for an opinion get to shape what that opinion is.
I think we were a lot better off in the sciences when adventurers through discovery would publish wild finds in a search for fortune and glory. The idea of profiting off finding a new treasure in the world and becoming rich in the process was more honest than what we have now, where experts are paid to shape an opinion and steer people as sponsored spokespeople toward some treatment that might not be good for them. A good example is in the diagnosis of diabetes, for instance, where pancreatic health can be self-generated. However, the medical approach shaped by paid experts wants to steer patients toward pharmaceutical treatments because that’s where the profit is. The goal is not in saving lives with real and permanent treatment, it’s in keeping people sick so that pharma companies can profit off the demise of those patients. The ability to purchase a peer-reviewed opinion then shapes reality, not toward the truth but toward the desire of profit seekers at the expense of honesty. How often have I heard that the Clovis people migrated into North America across the frozen land bridge from Russia to Alaska 20,000 years ago? When none of the expert opinions can begin to explain why there were such large skeletons found in Indian mounds all over North America from a people with very precise understandings of mathematics, and were certainly not hunters and gatherers, but sophisticated city dwellers, such as at the Cahokia site just outside of St. Louis that had cities larger than what was found in Europe at the time. Most of that information has been suppressed by the peer review process, and only old-fashioned passion projects from seekers of fortune and glory have been able to shake that information loose from the world.
It has been a house of cards that was always going to fail, and that one billion dollars reported just for those four publications is just the tip of the iceberg. This same practice is occurring in all our professional fields that produce experts. Being an expert pays a lot of money once you establish yourself. And as I said, I get a lot of offers, which I turn down because I don’t like the process, and would never take money for it. Because I see it all as a huge problem. These latest reports only confirm what I always suspected. When you can pay cash to create a truth, can you say that a truth is real? When opinion is for sale, I don’t see that it has any value. An expert might work hard to build up credibility to put their name next to something, but the minute people discover that the opinion was purchased, all merit for the contents flies out the window. That is what the CIA has been doing in the field of anthropology to shape social discourse by controlling the narrative with people on their staff, or with money paid to experts through black budgets not regulated by members of an elected body of government in Congress. And since many people got caught over the Lancet issue regarding COVID, I don’t think the expert class will ever gain credibility back. It will take more than time to get people to trust in the system again. And the peer review process is now broken forever. And that might lead to wild theories and speculations from a hungry public. But honestly, that information is more valid than the opinions of people paid to shape a truth that might have no basis in reality. But it might serve the plots of more scandalous people who do not have our best interests in mind.
Rich Hoffman

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