BOTH Margi’s Mayo doctors just gave her two thumbs up! :-) I interview Margi; this is our FINAL cancer fundraiser!

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A national socialist comrade who generously supports my work said he fears that my religious ideas, at least the belief in a personal God, might all be an illusion, feel-good, yes, but escapist and, well, “bovine manure.” 🙂

This is part one of my reply. 🙂

Part two will address the issue of “God.”

We as national socialists never seek to escape reality, unlike libtards, civic nationalists, Christian Zionists, and libertarian conservatives.

Our honor is TRUTH!

Margi and I just got back from a wonderful meeting with her main oncologist. She, like the Taiwanese MD, was so pleasantly surprised at the turnaround, which YOUR donations have made possible!

In July, she and her husband, a cancer surgeon, and three other doctors, trooped into Margi’s room to tell her, and show her with a camera threaded down her nose to her throat (under local anesthetic), that the lethal tumor was right on her carotid artery.

Thus, in July, she had only a twenty-percent chance of survival, and that 20% counted only IF she agreed with these Mayo Clinic doctors to start chemo and radiation right away!

But this week both she and the Taiwanese oncologist have been flashing big smiles!

I want to give full credit to my angels at this juncture.

I made a vow in July to start my Aryan faith, come hell or high water, and asked the gods to please let Margi live.

Now I have to keep up my end of the bargain.

More on supernatural things below.

Margi and I discuss in this video, filmed at the Hope Lodge in Rochester, Minnesota, located across the street from the Mayo Clinic complex,  how she has beaten the true hell that is Stage III throat cancer. (She never smoked or drank!)

We succeeded with 1) my help as constant caregiver for the last 18 months and 2) the deployment of the $100 million, high-tech proton-beam — a particle accelerator (located in a giant bunker with 30-feet-thick walls) here at the incredible Mayo Clinic. If you would like to donate as we head toward the finish line, pls go to (EN) https://johndenugent.com/contact-support (DE) https://johndenugent.com/kontakt-spenden

(You might turn the volume up a bit for Margi.)

Alex Kern John De Nugent Aufdeutsch Good luck to both of you! Ave!
Hope she gets well soon. She is one of my old FB friends, but I only realised her immense knowledge when I heard her in a couple of interviews with Carolyn Yeager.

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Lobby of the Jacobson Building, where the proton beam is located

a kind volunteer, one of 3,500, all white, gives Margi a hand massage

One thing that strikes Mayo patients is that people come here from all over the United States and the world, even though there are cancer treatment centers right in their own backyard. Cancer is not a rare disease these days!

But the treatment, in the thoroughly Judaized medical, pharmaceutical and hospital-management professions of today, is often shoddy, cold, greedy and heartless, or even downright negligent!

Example: A proton-beam patient from Chicago named Mike told me his doctor called him and told him over the phone he had Stage III cancer!

Example: A lady from Wyoming got no treatment at all for her lung cancer for TWO MONTHS, was not told what kind of lung cancer it was, then was told mistakenly it had spread to both lungs (metastacized) when it had not  (throwing her into a panic, of course) — and then she was sloppily given only half the dose of chemo which her oncologist had prescribed. “Ooops”……..yeah, oops. So sorry you DIED..………..

Her son was outraged, and called her the next day.

 “Mom, you can pack your bags. Here is your patient number, xx-xxx-xxx, at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota. They will see you there tomorrow! I am taking you tonight to the airport!”

“Thank God I have a bossy son,” she said to me. “The Mayo has been wonderful. 🙂 ”

This woman, a sweet lady with a nice German face (strong jaw, like Margi, whose ancestors were “Hochstetters”), was fascinated by what I said about Near-Death Experiences, and asked if she could tell me a story that had happened to her.

She had just completed this jigsaw puzzle in the cybercafé community room, and, flush with a sense of accomplishment, she was resolved to tell me something…

She said: “John, I have never told anyone this story except my closest relatives, before now.

I was nine years old, and my uncle, my favorite uncle, who was 21, committed suicide. We were strict Mormons, and he had gotten some girl pregnant. He was such a nice person, always so kind to everyone. But I guess he could not live with the shame. He shot himself with a shotgun in his bedroom. And others in the family were at home, and heard the shot.

That day he had picked the lock on the fridge and given all us little cousins some popsickles.

We went home after that, and it was that evening that he shot himself, my uncle.

We came by the house the next day and the police had been there, and everything had been, you know, cleaned up.

And one of the adults told us kids that Jeremy had died suddenly.

The I saw Jeremy just standing there next to the adult who was talking to us kids.”

(Me) “How did he look? Like a flat image? A 3-D, like a hologram? A dream?”

(She) “Just like in his regular body, solid, but, still, you could slightly see through him.”

(Me) “What was the expression like on his face? I mean, it was a sin in the Mormon faith (and in most Christian faiths) to kill yourself, and especially over merely having made a baby. Maybe it was ‘fornication’ or ‘sex before marriage,’ but that was no reason to end his life!”

(She) “No expression really…. just looking at us kids.”

(Me) “Did he see you looking at him?”

(She) “No, he was looking from child to child, and did not see that I saw him.”

Beautiful scene from “Ghost:

 

The coming faith is built on real-people experiences just like this  that show that life does go in after the body you wore like some glove is pulled off.

This leads me to something that actor Jack Nicholson said, who starred in Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining.

I was researching whether the Jew Kubrick actually said this.

Kubrick DID say this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_and_religious_beliefs_of_Stanley_Kubrick

Excerpts:

In his memoir of Kubrick, Michael Herr, his friend and co-writer of the screenplay for Full Metal Jacket (1987), wrote:

Stanley had views on everything, but I would not exactly call them political… His views on democracy were those of most people I know, neither left nor right, not exactly brimming with belief, a noble failed experiment along our evolutionary way, brought low by base instincts, money and self-interest and stupidity… He thought the best system might be under a benign despot [….]

[….]

Frederic Raphael, who co-authored the Eyes Wide Shut script with Kubrick, says that the director once remarked that “Hitler was right about almost everything”, and insisted that any trace of Jewishness be expunged from the Eyes Wide Shut script.

Kubrick’s supposed relationship to his own ethnicity deeply troubled Raphael, a fellow Jew.

Raphael was further puzzled over Kubrick’s cryptic praise for Hitler, unable to decide if Kubrick was jesting.

Raphael was equally puzzled by Kubrick’s trashing of Schindler’s List.
[….]

Kubrick commented regarding A Clockwork Orange:

Man isn’t a noble savage, he’s an ignoble savage. He is irrational, brutal, weak, silly, unable to be objective about anything where his own interests are involved—that about sums it up.

I’m interested in the brutal and violent nature of man because it’s a true picture of him.

And any attempt to create social institutions on a false view of the nature of man is probably doomed to failure.

And here I come to the Jack Nicholson quote.

In Stanley Kubrick: A Life in Pictures, Jack Nicholson recalls that Kubrick said The Shining is an overall optimistic story because

“anything that says there’s anything after death is ultimately an optimistic story.”

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The new faith will be based on truth. On the hope and change which Obama promised and never delivered, the “hope and change” and the deliverance that our suffering people crave.

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