Attorney Accuses the CIA and DoD of Being Deeply Involved With COVID-19
"When someone got this [COVID] shot. They didn't get it from Pfizer or Moderna. They got it from the DoD. The DoD distributed this," testified attorney Tom Renz.
• Evidence suggests that COVID-19 was developed in the mid-2010s, with a Moderna patent from 2016 indicating a connection.
• A whistleblower provided military medical records showing a soldier receiving COVID-19 immunization by Moderna in 2014.
• Attorney Renz has developed a legal case against EcoHealth Alliance, alleging their involvement in creating SARS-CoV-2 with the CCP and Wuhan Lab.
• He then asked: "Does anybody believe that we transferred that sort of [bioweapon] technology to a CCP lab, without an okay from the DoD or CIA? I've got news for you. They knew exactly what was going on."
Managed to nab a couple of screens at The Jabberwocky tonight! It's been a blast using the venue's gambling system to run a little miniplot. I am almost sad we won our "watch" back
Guess we'll need to find another reason to go risking life and limb on dice rolls now c':
[I.D. a black and white drawing done in the style of the Alice's Adventures in Wonderland illustrations, with lots of hatching and linework. It depicts Sol's OC Faolan, a human version of the jabberwocky with long wavy hair, four horns, and bat wings, clothed in long fabric with lots of draping and folds. Faolan is holding a sword and is looking downward with a stricken expression. Behind it is a corpse-like version of Alice, with one eyeball falling out and a worm crawling in the skin of her arm. She is draped over Faolan, her chin on its shoulder, one arm wrapped around Faolans and her other hand is touching the tip of one of Faolans horns. They are standing in a forest. End I.D.]
There's an ancient creature imprisoned for a hundred years. Most are afraid to even speak its name for fear it might return. It's more powerful than any army. And once you tell it what you want, nothing, no one can stop it. But I beg you not to. It is called the Jabberwocky.
out of all the fragments of memorized poems in my mental repertoire, why did my brain decide to spit out jabberwocky. literally WHAT am I meant to do with the slithy toves and borogoves
The Jabberwocky is One of the Popular Fictional Creatures in a Children's work of Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland" series. In the Poem of his First Appearance, a King fears of his Son (who is a Knight) to slay the Dragon Beast (known as "Jabberwock") but even if the King's Son was unaware of this Dangerous Slithery Beast with Wings, the Knight managed to slay the Head of the Beast when it first approach to him.
Since Classical Fairy Tales were a thing during the Olden Days of Dark Eras, there would always be some form of stories of the trope in which Heroic Knights slaying Monsters (even for the sake of rescuing a Damsel) was a total popular thing since in Ancient Times of stories (example being the Myth of Perseus).
I wanted to make my own interpretation of the Jabberwocky a Feathery type by giving him the Bird Wings and even Bird-like Legs and even a Feathery bottom tail in the End. Surprisingly enough, this was indeed by the Tim Burton films' adaptation of the Alice stories but a lot of Adaptations don't tend to acknowledge the vest he always wears, even though there are some adaptations to the Alice stories that do acknowledge it.
Legends tell of an ancient dragon Pokémon with an unpiercable hide and razor-sharp claws. Noble knights sought it out, giving it gifts of food and treasure in exchange for its shed scales and nails. Things, for a time, were good.
One day, though, a knight came to the dragon wielding a sword forged of its own claw; the only thing sharp enough to cut through its hide. With a great heave, the knight plunged the sword into one of its heads, hoping the beast would perish and he could take all of the scales—and its treasure—for himself. He never returned.
Scabbarwocky never recovered from the injury; the stabbed head rendered fearful and silent. The right head, unimpeded and hungry for vengeance, now attacks any human indiscriminately on sight. Perhaps someone could earn its trust enough to remove the ancient sword and heal the ancient beast. But perhaps not.
Do you find it weird, how Jabberwocky is asociated with Alice nowadays? Even though it has nothing to do with her :p
Well, the Jabberwocky poem is in the original Through the Looking Glass and What Alice Found There. I don't think the creature makes an actual appearance in the story, though (I haven't fully read Through the Looking Glass tbh).
But I mean... Lewis Carroll wrote the poem. So it makes sense (Haha get it because it's a nonsense poem--) that he'd put it into his other work. It fits the vibe.
So really it's had a part in the Alice canon for a long time.
It also appears as an actual creature in the original American McGee Alice as a manifestation of her guilt at surviving the fire that killed her parents. (Which you probably know but I'm mentioning it anyway because it's my favourite interpretation of the Jabberwock as a creature) And also gets like 2 cameos in Madness Returns.
And, of course, the 2010 Tim Burton movie where Alice fucking kills it.
Weirdly Disney didn't bring in the Jabberwock(y), but I think that's because their animated movie is based off the original book where it isn't mentioned.
Also I just fucking realized (and I could be off base) but Elder Scrolls has a weapon called the Wabbajack. Which is a staff of Sheogorath. The Deadric Prince of nonsense (and cheese). And it's only now hitting me that it's a possible Jabberwock refrense.
‘Twas brillig, and the palmate feet
Did slap and plap upon the road;
Loud honking came out naturally,
The white goose braz'nly strode.
“Beware the horrible goose, my man!
The beak that bites, the wings that flap!
Beware that fucking bird, and shun
its pilfering ransack!"
He put his flatcap on his head:
For long within the garden moiled–
So, outwards hence, to sit on bench,
The gate open to his toil.
A moment of peace he thought he had,
But, klepto-beak, the white goose flew
Honking flaps up from soggy path,
Its bell-passion made anew!
One two! One two! And out and round
He chased it hard and it chased back!
Rake was plundered, he felt outnumbered
and even lost his snacks.
“What is up with this bloody bird?
I'm out of wits, I've smashed my thumb!
O curse'd day! Fuck you! Go 'way!”
He yelled, not having fun.
‘Twas brillig, and the palmate feet
Did slap and plap upon the road;
Loud honking came out naturally,
The white goose braz'nly strode.