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Alex Jones

Jones and Food

Rolling Stone magazine lights up Alex Jones. Kinda. It starts off swinging hard. Toward the beginning of the piece: "The Gates Foundation? 'Obviously a eugenics operation.' The latest WikiLeaks dump? 'All the hallmarks of an intelligence disinfo campaign.' While urging his audience to wake up and smell the police state, Jones can sound thoughtful and intellectual, quick to quote Nietzsche, Plato, de Tocqueville, Gibbon and Huxley. Mostly, though, he defaults into machine-gun bursts of rage that crescendo with an adolescent snarl – Holden Caulfield playing Paul Revere." But although the author is obviously no fan, he's rather kind throughout the rest of the piece. The writers mentions that Jones is a doting father and husband, not a bigot, and possessed with high analytical abilities. He even lets Jones get the last word: "I have deep context for every claim I make," Jones insists. "I know some people say I exaggerate, but I believe everything I say. It's just that the denial is so strong, the apathy so deep, that people need something to shake them out of their morass. We're like flowers who naturally turn toward the sun, and the globalists want us turned toward Hollywood and the TV so they can poison us. It's like one of those drawings with a hidden pattern. Once you stare long enough, it appears. Then you wonder: How did I ever not see it?" It's almost as though the Rolling Stones writer gives Jones more credibility than I do (and I get a kick out of the guy). It's a sense of objectivity that I didn't see much during my six-month subscription to the rock-n-roll rag. * * * * * * * Food prices are skyrocketing! Get your garden cranking! You heard it here first. But maybe I wasn't quite right. According to this source, garden-type produce isn't going to see severe price hikes: "Fruits and vegetables will be the one area where prices shouldn't rise that noticeably. . . . Lapp expects a 2-5% annual increase." They're expecting 5%-8% annual increases in most other food areas over the next four years.

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