The Prophet Speaks: Woman predicts 2021 in 2019
“This is the land of the free and the brave. or is it the land of the sheep and the slave?”
It’s a fine line between paranoiac and prophetic these days. Ask Claudia Stauber of Vermont.
Stauber predicted a global pandemic and mass vaccine mandates in a pre-COVID, September 2019 Youtube rant. When this came to be, her video didn’t last on the portal, presumably for violating community standards that didn’t exist at the time of posting. It has since been reposted in shortened form (above) by another user.
You can’t dismiss this car seat prophetess as partisan - in the full video viewable on Rumble, she pointed out Donald Trump’s role in the deep state scam, and dismissed the idea of deliverance at the ballot box.
Stauber presumably wasn’t consulting an 8K LED crystal ball. She was simply reading the digital tea leaves more accurately than anyone else. Still, an astounding feat of pre-COVID clairvoyance. And if she had such foreknowledge…who else did?
(Perhaps it’s a good idea to pay attention to someone who, at least once, saw the future is such sharp outline. Here she is in conversation with the great researcher Alison McDowell, in a still-relevant interview from April 2021.)
What do you think? Leave your comments below.
Predictions raise enormous questions re 'is there free will', or is everything determined or what? and maybe time itself is an illusion and everything exits already, like furniture in a vast room...hell, who knows? I like engaging in predictions myself...except lately, when they all sound dystopian.
I've been listening at work to the Van Morrison's 1973 album "Hard Nose the Highway", and the song "The Great Deception" always makes me think of him as a rare, unpretentious and knowing guy. For those of us who have been awake to it over last few years we maybe feel like we've graduated from the type of person who would have said, about that lady, "Crikey, who is that?", to "Crikey, that's me, and I'm sounding like a crazy person." It reminds me of the writing process that Robert Anton Wilson and Robert Shea purported to in creating the Illuminatus Trilogy; throwing every conceivable and unbelievable conspiracy theory into the mix, and finding out in the years to come that many had weight.