From this 1997 David Bowie video which is laden with symbology and occult references : https://youtu.be/u7APmRkatEU
A couple of stills from the video :
Shooting cop scene : https://files.catbox.moe/opjuzy.jpg
Getting into taxi with cop car in front of mini-mart in the background :
So, that second still reminded me of the George Floyd scenario.. so I did a search for George Floyd minimart and got this:
Worcester George Floyd Store A Coincidence Amid Tragedy https://patch.com/massachusetts/worcest ... id-tragedy
The address of the store: 687 Millbury St Worcester, MAWORCESTER, MA — There's a store in Worcester that shares a name with George Floyd, who died May 25 after a police officer kneeled on his neck for nearly 9 minutes. The name crossover is a strange coincidence amid a national uprising over police brutality — and the man who founded the store sees important parallels between recent protests and the country he emigrated from.
The founding of the George Floyd Mini Mart along Millbury Street in Worcester can be traced back to northern Syria in the mid-1990s. George Kentar was deeply into music and would visit a store called Floyd Cassettes to buy albums. He liked the word "Floyd" and asked the owner where the word came from. That's how he found out about a band called Pink Floyd.
Soon after, Kentar opened his own convenience store in a room off of an apartment he was renting in the Syrian city of Qamishli. He named the store George Floyd, a combination of his first name and the band he loved. He worked full-time selling ice cream and cigarettes to locals and devoted a lot of time to playing music in local bands.
In 2002, Kentar and his band was invited to play in the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in Washington. It was his first trip to the United States.
..At the time, Kentar had a lot of family living in Worcester. His uncle came here in the 1970s to go to school, and family members have been coming ever since. Kentar came back to the U.S. in 2003 and joined his family in Worcester.
Kentar didn't speak much English at first and worked more than full-time at a convenience store and as an electrician. He remembers being welcomed by local residents. In particular, one woman, a regular at the Sunny Farms he worked at in Quinsigamond Village, pledged to help him learn two new English words every day...
He worked 80 hours a week and didn't make much money. He was constantly stressed out over theft; thieves took $4,000 worth of cigarettes in a nighttime burglary.
"I put my blood into the store," he said.
He sold it in 2017, and the new owner hasn't changed the name. Kentar now owns Papa George's Pizza along June Street. He still works 80 hours a week, but he's confident it will get easier (the name of the pizza shop is another coincidence — Kentar says he didn't go seeking another business bearing his name).
...The protests worry him. In 2011, the Arab Spring either toppled or attempted to dethrone autocratic leaders from Morocco to Yemen. The Syrian Armed Forces met the uprising in that country against President Bashar al-Assad with brutal violence. Close to 400,000 have died, and the civil war is still going on.
Check out what's 3.3 miles away :
https://files.catbox.moe/dxnlgg.jpg
College of the Holy Cross! That's the Jesuit college that Anthony Fauci attended.
At the same address is Anokyekrom African Restaurant owned by Ghanian Richard Boateng. A restaurant review: https://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_ ... setts.htmlRe Holy Cross posts:
Anons being encouraged to invest in SMART GLASS shares. So what's the problem? viewtopic.php?f=50&t=1912Epstein-connected Cantor Fitzgerald > College of the Holy Cross - The Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery > Alec Baldwin https://files.catbox.moe/3perz8.jpg
In 2009 Harvard showed up : Ghanaian community serves as language lab https://archive.is/FJB9iReviewed March 6, 2020
RUN!
DISGUSTING Place. Rude staff, slow service, cold food. Workers have been seen dumping strange liquids from large containers outside. Loud, drunk patrons fighting in the street, they URINATE AND DEFECATE IN THE STREET, and throw trash everywhere. Parking nightmare - your car will be towed. POLICE HAVE BEEN CALLED SEVERAL TIMES. Drug Selling in the street. Disgrace to Ghanaian culture and reputation. This place should be condemned. RUN from Anokye Krom! If you have any class or self respect you should avoid this hell hole at all costs. Elder Paintsil's on Main Street, Worcester is much better in every way.
By Aaron Nicodemus TELEGRAM & GAZETTE STAFF
Six college students seeking the sounds of Ghana came to Worcester today, home of a well-established community from the West African nation. The college students are learning the Asante Twi language spoken in Ghana as part of their undergraduate education. Today, they had lunch at the Anokye Kron restaurant on Millbury Street and visited a Twi-language radio station in the city and some shops selling wares from Ghana.
The students came at the suggestion of their teacher, Prince M. Obiri-Mainoo, a Ghanaian native who has lived in Worcester for five years. He said they would like to end their course by going to Ghana itself...The students, five from Harvard University and one from MIT, say their reasons for learning Twi are varied...
“You can learn those (other) languages at almost any university,” said Sumorwuo Zaza, a Harvard junior studying government and economics. “I would regret not taking a language I couldn’t take anywhere else.”
Sarah K. Peprah, a Harvard freshman, said her Ghanaian-born parents spoke Twi in their home.....Kwami Williams, a sophomore aeronautical engineering major at MIT, was born in Ghana...
Worcester’s Ghanaian population is estimated at several thousand, with several thousand more residing elsewhere in Worcester County. Serving that population are several Ghanaian churches and social clubs, as well as restaurants and shops. An FM radio station, WORD 102.9, knits the Twi-speaking community together with its 24-hours-a-day of programming
Smithsonian Folklife Festival records: 2002 Smithsonian Folklife Festival https://sirismm.si.edu/EADpdfs/CFCH.SFF.2002.pdf
Series 2: The Silk Road: Connecting Cultures, Creating Trust
For ten days in the summer of 2002, the great geographical and cultural distance that lies between
the heart of Europe and the far reaches of Asia was reduced to the length of a leisurely afternoon
stroll on the National Mall. For the first time in its 36-year history, the Smithsonian Folklife Festival
had a single - and remarkably ambitious - theme: the Silk Road. The name denotes the network of
trade routes, over both land and sea, along which merchants and travelers began to move across
Asia and Europe from the first millennium B.C.E. The most famous east-west component of the Silk
Road began in Xi'an, the ancient capital of China, broke north and south of China's Takla Makan
Desert, and traversed a vast stretch of Central and Western Asia on its way to the eastern end of the
Mediterranean...
Folkways Advisory Board
Michael Asch (Chair), Phyllis Barney, Hal Cannon, Don DeVito, Ella Jenkins, Fred Silber
The Silk Road Project, Inc.
Yo-Yo Ma, Artistic Director; Jean Davidson, Managing Director; Theodore Levin, Project Director
The Asian Heritage Foundation
Rajeev Sethi, Founder Trustee
A lot of interesting names on that Smithsonian document, like.. Folkways Advisory Board, Michael AschRe Silk Road post:
German police darknet CP case FOLLOWUP : Boystown viewtopic.php?f=16&p=9917#p9917
The Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the Smithsonian’s museums of Asian art > after-party “TranscenDance” hosted by the Silk Road Society > Alec Baldwin and Hilaria http://www.revamp.com/story.php?StoryID=2692
The Infamously Notorious Bob Dylan Album http://www.garygreenmusic.com/dylan.htmhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moses_Asch
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smithsonian_FolkwaysMoses Asch (December 2, 1905 – October 19, 1986), often known as Moe Asch, was a Polish-American recording engineer and record executive. He founded Asch Records, which then changed its name to Folkways Records when the label transitioned from 78 RPM recordings to LP records.. the son of Yiddish language novelist and dramatist Sholem Asch... son, Michael Asch..
In 1905, Moses "Moe" Asch was born in Poland. His father, Sholem Asch, a successful author, made enough money to move the family to Paris in 1912. In 1914, Sholem left Paris for work in New York City and, a year later, sent for his family...In the mid-1920s, Asch studied radio engineering in Germany, a center for the new science. When he returned to the United States, he worked for various electronic firms before opening his own radio repair business, Radio Labs, during the Great Depression. In this business, Moe built equipment for radio stations and installed recorders for air use...
In 1940, Sholem invited his son with him to New Jersey to meet physicist and humanitarian Albert Einstein, who encouraged Moe to record and document the sounds of the world, which Asch took to be his life calling. Soon after that meeting, in early 1940, Asch founded Asch Records with a small staff and studio located in downtown Manhattan, New York.
Of course there's the whole back story with American folk music.. we know about Dylan don't we? See: James Alefantis and his friends as occult movies producers - summary by @Heisenberg123 viewtopic.php?f=16&p=9666#p9666Gary Green's Musical Adventures After Folkways
With the suicide (or murder, according to some) of Gary's friend folksinger Phil Ochs and the death of his mentor, Folkways Records owner Moe Asch, Gary Green left the music world. However before his departure there were several Gary-esque adventures that shaped his music. While still recording and touring for Folkways Records and acting as associate editor for three issues of Broadside Magazine, Gary also co-produced three albums for Folkways and Broadside (including Phil Ochs Sings For Broadside Volume 2, a compilation of New York street musicians called Streetsounds, and the now-infamous album Bob Dylan vs. A.J. Weberman
CBS President Don West > article: Who Played Don West On Lost in Space https://line.17qq.com/articles/iigjpbjejz.html and that's a whole other post..>>The Harvard area had nurtured a nineteen fifties bohemian culture that eventually fostered folk luminaries like Joan Baez and Bob Dylan, bands such as The Lovin Spoonful and The Chambers Brothers, and a wealth of other underground notables. In 1961 Fritz Richmond was the focal point of this burgeoning scene, the leader of a small folk band making the rounds of Boston coffeehouses...
..The Family tried to recruit high profile members in the hopes they could be used to further the vague Lyman philosophy. The recruitment campaign brought in notables such as Owen deLong, a former speechwriter for Robert Kennedy, George Peper, an assistant to CBS President Don West, and a recently discovered nobody turned actor named Mark Frechette. ..
......In the early 1960s, Frechette was allegedly one of several victims of sexual abuse by Rev. Laurence Francis Xavier Brett of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport in Connecticut.