Isabelle Paul and her husband owned the Bay Roc Hotel, Montego Bay, Jamaica [Jamaica is to the left of Haiti..just saying].. the precursor to the Sandals Hotel chain https://www.standard.co.uk/hp/front/par ... 26496.html
In the post David Bowie music video and George Floyd - when worlds collide... viewtopic.php?f=50&t=2786 I explain how a priest ordained by Bishop McManus in St. Paul Cathedral after which he joined Saint John's Seminary (Massachusetts) , along with other Catholic priests, has been visiting sites at the Mexican border that we suspect are involved with the human trafficking ratlines. In addition, their involvement with children's charities is highlighted. Founders of the Starlight Foundation include Steven Spielberg and Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. whose father belonged to St. John's Lodge #1.
As explained in that post, another related thread is Ames Research Center is the NASA complex housing immigrant children: Related post: Ames Research Center (NASA), Singularity University, Epstein and the Occult - NOTES https://searchvoat.co/v/thinkdrafts/3698903
Both Gobel and de Grey feature in Top-100 Longevity Leaders http://analytics.dkv.global/data/pdf/Lo ... Report.pdf....Ames is the home of NASA's large research and development divisions in Advanced Supercomputing,[8] Human Factors,[9] and Artificial Intelligence..Singularity University hosts its leadership and educational program at the facility. The Organ Preservation Alliance[1] is also headquartered there;..the Alliance is a nonprofit organization that works in partnership with the Methuselah Foundation - co-founded in 2003 by David Gobel and Aubrey de Grey.
Matt Hancock is at No. 63. He's on page 101. Ray Kurzweil is #78.Aging Analytics Agency is known for its series of reports documenting the emergence of the global Longevity Industry, defined primarily as a convergence between biomedicine, AI and other data-driven technologies. Our most common type of report, the regional case study, normally contains lists of “influencers”: people from the region described by the report who have made the largest impact in their particular field, according to that field’s metric of success (e.g. number of dollars invested if the person is an investor, or a number of headlines generated if that person is public figure, or a number of citations if that person is a researcher, and so on).
At #1 is Alan Russell https://mindmaps.aginganalytics.com/rep ... /faces/244
The author of the report is Dmitry Kaminskiy aka Dmitrii CAMINSCHII https://find-and-update.company-informa ... pointments
An FT article on him and the longevity business: The lucrative business of living longer https://www.ft.com/content/eb7c5c9a-b4e ... 9c8613f4a1
of course we can find the Kaminskiy's bio at the Lifeboat Foundation https://lifeboat.com/ex/bios.dmitry.kaminskiy
The emphasis at the summit was on the “longevity dividend” rather than the “ageing demographic time bomb”. Note the positivity. Many businesses see huge opportunities ahead because those over the age of 50 hold 70 per cent of UK household wealth. There is also employment potential for the young — a re-distribution of wealth where both sides win...
The one billion retired people globally are a multi-trillion dollar opportunity for business,” said Dmitry Kaminskiy, co-author of the UK Longevity Industry Report and managing partner of Deep Knowledge Ventures, who was a panellist at last week’s event.
Lifeboat's logo :Member of:
Business Board
Finance Board
Life Extension Board
New Money Systems Board
Robotics/AI Board
Well, I think that logo is quite appropriate, apart from the obvious relation to lifeboats. The Order of St John has marine rescue connections as well as to funding nanotechnology research. I can't remember atm where I read about the nanotechnology links but an example of such is Dr Mark Welland : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Welland
You'll note the red and white colours of the order and which I pointed to in this post: The Ivermectin Psyop.....imho viewtopic.php?f=50&t=2328 about the 'COVID Hunter' and other posts such as There's Something Strange about the Order of St. John. 40% of Brothers Have Been Accused of Child Sexual Abuse. https://searchvoat.co/v/pizzagate/2138955professor of nanotechnology at the University of Cambridge and head of the Nanoscience Centre. He has been a fellow of St John's College, Cambridge, since 1986 ..
St John's College, Cambridge https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St_John's ... _Cambridge
Well, the abolition of the slave trade story is a little more complicated than that wiki narrative.. I'll get to that later..St John's College is a constituent college of the University of Cambridge (the full, formal name of the college is the College of St John the Evangelist in the University of Cambridge[3]) founded by the Tudor matriarch Lady Margaret Beaufort. ..The college's alumni comprise the winners of 12 Nobel Prizes (including physicists Paul Dirac, Roger Penrose and Max Born, the latter having been affiliated with the college in the 1930s), seven prime ministers and 12 archbishops of various countries, at least two princes and three saints...
Prince William was affiliated with the college while undertaking a university-run course in estate management in 2014.
The site was originally occupied by the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, probably founded around 1200.[10] The hospital infirmary was located where the east end of the current chapel now stands.. Lady Margaret Beaufort, having endowed Christ's College sought to found a new college, and chose the hospital site at the suggestion of John Fisher, her chaplain and Bishop of Rochester...
St John's remains a great rival of Trinity College, which is its main competitor in sports and academia.
St John's and the abolition of the British slave trade
As part of the commemoration of the bicentenary of the 1807 Act, and as a representative of one of the Ivy League universities offering American historical perspective on the Triangular Trade, President Ruth J. Simmons of Brown University (herself a descendant of American slaves) gave a public lecture at St John's College entitled "Hidden in Plain Sight: Slavery and Justice in Rhode Island" on 16 February 2007.
Searching for 'st john lifeboats' will take us to : Ferryside Inshore Lifeboat St John Ambulance's only water-based division https://www.ferryside-lifeboat.co.uk/our-history/
Remember, the Queen is the head of St. John's Order. Now let's look at RNLI : Royal National Lifeboat Institution https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Nat ... nstitutionFerryside Inshore Lifeboat is one of more than seventy inshore lifeboats stationed around the British Isles that operate independently of the RNLI. It remains though a 'declared facility' as par of HM Coastguards Search and Rescue organisation and is launched in response to 999 calls under the control of HM Coastguard.
So, not so independent of each other. I did a search for Elizabeth and the double-headed eagle: Elizabeth Tokens found at Jamestown https://historicjamestowne.org/collecti ... han-token/The Royal National Lifeboat Institution (RNLI) is the largest charity that saves lives at sea around the coasts of the United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland, the Channel Islands, and the Isle of Man, as well as on some inland waterways. It is one of several lifeboat services operating in the same area. The RNLI is a charity in the UK and in the Republic of Ireland. Queen Elizabeth II is Patron.
Jamestown, Virginia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jamestown,_VirginiaA total of 26 tokens of this type have been excavated at Jamestown. So far, they have not been found on any other archaeological site in the United States... The tokens depict an English crown above the Tudor rose with the initials ER and the legend GOD SAVE THE QVENE on the obverse side and a double-headed eagle on the reverse. Because of this iconography, they are believed to be associated with Queen Elizabeth I. The double-headed eagle may be a representation of the Queen’s role as both the secular leader and the titular head of the Anglican Church. It is unclear whether Elizabeth herself commissioned the manufacturing of these tokens, or what their original use in England was. At Jamestown, it is likely that the tokens were used for trade with the Virginia Indians or within the fort as currency.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bacon%27s_RebellionThe Jamestown[a] settlement in the Colony of Virginia was the first permanent English settlement in the Americas..It was established by the Virginia Company of London as "James Fort" on May 4, 1607 O.S. (May 14, 1607 N.S.)..
In August 1619, the first recorded slaves from Africa to British North America arrived in what is now Old Point Comfort near the Jamestown colony, on a British privateer ship flying a Dutch flag. The approximately 20 Africans from the present-day Angola had been removed by the British crew from a Portuguese slave ship, the "São João Bautista".[10][11] They most likely worked in the tobacco fields as slaves under a system of race-based indentured servitude.[12] The modern conception of slavery in the colonial United States was formalized in 1640 (the John Punch hearing) and was fully entrenched in Virginia by 1660..
The London Company's second settlement in Bermuda claims to be the site of the oldest town in the English New World, as St. George's, Bermuda was officially established in 1612 as New London, whereas James Fort in Virginia was not converted into James Towne until 1619, and further did not survive to the present day...
Today, Jamestown is one of three locations composing the Historic Triangle of Colonial Virginia, along with Williamsburg and Yorktown, with two primary heritage sites. Historic Jamestowne[15] is the archaeological site on Jamestown Island and is a cooperative effort by Jamestown National Historic Site (part of Colonial National Historical Park) and Preservation Virginia. Jamestown Settlement, a living history interpretive site, is operated by the Jamestown Yorktown Foundation, a state agency of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Detail of the map made by Pedro de Zúñiga, depicting the fort in about 1608.. The Jamestown settlers arrived in Virginia during a severe drought, ..Two-thirds of the settlers died before ships arrived in 1608 with supplies and German and Polish craftsmen..
And back to the future:According to the Historic Jamestowne National Park website, "For many years, historians considered the Virginia Rebellion of 1676 to be the first stirring of revolutionary sentiment in [North] America, which culminated in the American Revolution almost exactly one hundred years later. However, in the past few decades, based on findings from a more distant viewpoint, historians have come to understand Bacon's Rebellion as a power struggle between two stubborn, selfish leaders rather than a glorious fight against tyranny."[38]
Nonetheless, many in the early United States, including Thomas Jefferson, saw Bacon as a patriot and believed that Bacon's Rebellion truly was a prelude to the later American Revolution against the control of the Crown.[39][40] This understanding of the conflict was reflected in 20th-century commemorations, including a memorial window in Colonial Williamsburg and a prominent tablet in the Virginia House of Delegates chamber of the State Capitol in Richmond, which recalls Bacon as "A great Patriot Leader of the Virginia People who died while defending their rights October 26, 1676."[39][40][41] Subsequent to the rebellion, the Virginia colonial legislature enacted Virginia Slave Codes of 1705, which created several strict laws upon people of African background. Additionally, the codes were aimed socially segregate the white and black races.
Holiday prices jump as Boris Johnson prepares to unveil TODAY the countries we WILL be allowed to visit from May 17 - but will Israel, Malta and Gibraltar be the only hot spots on the 'green list'? https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/articl ... -soar.html