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Embryo Men Decades of Conspiracy, Christian Nationalism, and Fear Led Us to The End of Roe v. Wade – Religion Dispatches

This morning as we again awaken to the realization that American women have lost their bodily autonomy, that five individuals can decide that States rights cant control guns, but that they do have the power to control womens bodies, we mourn the loss of 50 years of a right to an abortion. Yet, as we argue that this is returning us to a dark historical period, we must also look to how this decades-long battle by the Christian Right has made use of conspiracy theories, God, country, and a battle against communism, socialism, and humanism to disempower and manipulate those with the greatest power in elections: women.

These battles against the rights of women, people of color, and those in the LGBTQ2SA communities have never wavered. Erupting each time progress has been made, these groups have for decades pushed a cohesive message that activated an angry minority who interpret our world as infringing upon their rights, and who perceive injustice in every gain made for those who neither look like them nor believe as they do.

As many of us fought for rights, inclusivity, equality, and individuality, these individuals brought moral panics, conspiracy theories, and abject fear to the table to motivate their followers. To this way of thinking, behind every step forward, lay an evil cabal, a demon or minion of Satan, while they, as the soldiers on the side of the eternal, were commanded to battle in the streets and storm the voting booths.

In the 1960s, America saw the rise of a socio-political movement in the John Birch Society (JBS). Robert Welch and his National Council, a few members of which he dubbed Gods Angry Men, worked endlessly to marry free enterprise with religion. Armed with the knowledge that the three most influential groups in society were youth, women, and religious leaders, they created a three-pronged approach to inflict fear on their membership to mobilize them to battle for God, country, and family.

That motto alone articulates how their brand of nationalism was to be formed. In their monthly magazine American Opinion, best-selling author Taylor Caldwell (1900-1985) wrote articles to the women of the Society reinforcing the evils of feminism, of communism, and of free choice via conspiracy theory, Christian persecution, and an unwavering dedication to traditional gender roles. Replace communism with socialism and such an article would be right at home in todays National Review or in one of the larger legacy papersostensibly to ensure balanced coverage.

For Caldwell, the injustices of society were at the hands of the LGBTQ2SA community and feminists. Using a creative version of nostalgia, she perpetuated a scenario where sexual freedom and womens equality was the death knell to America. She wrote of the importance of women in raising manly men, where there was no blurring of the sexes, and a mans word was law in his house, no matter how shrewish his wife, as she wrote in her 1967 article, Love Thy Neighbor An Example of Divine Humor. In her words Papa had nights out with the Boys, and if he came home a little beery, and late, Mama knew enough to keep her mouth shut. That was the wondrous world that Caldwell and the JBS wanted to create.

As with most articulations of nationalism, women were portrayed as the ones who protected American values of family, gender roles, morality, and religion. In Caldwells articles, and in the rhetoric of much of todays conservative movement, it was Americas abandonment of God and embrace of LGBTQ2SA communities, feminism, and effeminate men, that opened the door for the communist/socialist infiltration. Caldwells advice was to treat your son, from the very bassinet, to be manly, as he wasnt an adorable baby, but rather an embryo man. Women were to respect his status as a man even while an infant.

This was in harmony with her direction on how a woman was to treat her husband as her dearest treasure above all else, whose children are secondary to her mate in all things, as she put it in a 1968 article On Manliness: So You Want to Raise A Boy? Those feminists who were not bearing children, not getting married, and were using their powers of seduction to dupe men into working for the communists, were at fault for the state of America.

These feminists and those perverts were being used by the Illuminati to destroy America, God, and all that was good in the world to create a New World Order, where Christians, capitalists, and true Americans would be enslaved. If you hope to shrug this off as ancient history take a look at Tucker Carlsons 2022 documentary The End of Men, about which Annika Brockschmidt writes, For Carlson, the alleged decline of conservative values, and thus the decline of America, can be explained directly by the effeminization of men.

A picture from White Lives Matter Telegram group.

Response to the John Birch Society has long been one of ridicule and dismissal (as is the case more recently regarding Tucker Carlsons documentary). Groups like the JBS, and influencers who spread disinformation and conspiracy theories have been perceived as a tinfoil-hat-wearing fringe with no influence. This response has culminated in the position we find ourselves in today. Weve ignored and mocked, while theyve gathered momentum and built a contemporary movement held together by conspiracy, moral panics, and fear.

The groomer panic we see today is a culmination of decades of adherence to conspiracy theories, that hold that women and feminists, are the ultimate weapon of the great replacement of white people. The seduction of sexuality is the downfall of God, country, and family.

In the social media posts of conspiracy theories, extremists, and white nationalists the morning after the ruling we saw a repeat of history:

Roe v. Wade has just been overturned. Millions of unborn White Children may now have their lives protected, protection that should have never been taken away in the first place. The pendulum that is our society is beginning to swing back in our direction. White Lives Matter!

The end of Roe v. Wade isnt celebrated as a constitutional victory, its reframed as attacks on LGBTQ2SA communities and women, and is celebrated as a win for God, country, and family. The enemy remains an evil cabal intent on ending a nation.

Comment from a Proud Boys Chat Group on Telegram

While we continue to ridicule those building a socio-political movement rooted in manufactured nostalgia, they continue to build on this perceived win for God, and for true patriots of the nationi.e., those who are heterosexual, Christian, patriarchal, and white. This SCOTUS decision is a return to an America where only traditional gender roles were acceptable, sex is a mans domain (and available on demand), and where God ruled the nationa very nostalgic return.

Nostalgia is a form of timekeeping thats rooted in politics. Its a lens through which to look at the contemporary world in which fear and anxiety are the catalyst for a longing for the past. In this context the past is envisioned as a period where the decline of society began; where a moral absence started creating the contemporary world; where theres a lack of true social relationships and personal authenticity.

Nostalgia isnt a need for or recollection of a past utopia but is instead a criticism of the present. It isnt a personal memory but is instead a collective one about the biography of groups or the nation; nostalgia lies in the plane between the personal and the collective memory. In this light MAGA was the perfect slogan for a figure like Donald Trump.

Comments from a Proud Boys Chat Group on Telegram

Using language and memes that promote the idea of the degeneration of the nation at the hands of feminism or gender rights, nationalists are positioned as the opposition to progress and create a stigmatization of groups who are on the margins of society, labelling them as degenerate classes. LGBTQ2SA groups, sex workers, criminals, feminists, and substance-addicted individuals are defined as racial deviants and at odds with the culture of the nation. The selective use and support of feminist issues, such as TERF ideologies, construct a narrative to reinforce traditional norms of femininity and masculinity and patriarchal and heteronormative values.

Its imperative that we acknowledge the power of conspiracyand of fear and how its a motivating factorwoven into the language of religion and Gods work, in order to stop the hemorrhaging of our rights. While the official framing of the removal of rights is constructed within the Constitution, or historical precedents, the truth is, the movement behind these decisions, is standing upon a revisionist history of nostalgia, hate, and fear.

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Embryo Men Decades of Conspiracy, Christian Nationalism, and Fear Led Us to The End of Roe v. Wade - Religion Dispatches

Operation Northwoods, The US False Flag Plot To Incite A War With Cuba – All That’s Interesting

Devised by the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 1962, Operation Northwoods called for CIA agents to attack U.S. military personnel and civilians so they could blame it on Cuba's communist regime.

In the early 1960s, Americas leaders turned an increasingly nervous eye south, where communist leader Fidel Castro had risen to power in Cuba. Determined to end his reign, the U.S. government came up with several false flag attacks under the banner of Operation Northwoods.

The classified plan, organized under the umbrella of the anti-Castro Cuba Project, or Operation Mongoose, proposed a number of ways that the U.S. could fake a Cuban attack against America as a way to justify U.S. military intervention in Cuba. Military leaders suggested staging attacks at Guantanamo Bay, sinking ships full of Cuban refugees, and even staging the shooting down of a civilian aircraft.

And Operation Northwoods was more than just idle scheming. It was a concrete plan co-signed by the Joint Chiefs of Staff and presented to the office of President John F. Kennedy. This is the story of Operation Northwoods.

By 1959, Cold War tensions between the Soviet Union and the United States were nearing a fever pitch, and it was at this moment that Fidel Castro came on the scene.

In 1959, the communist revolutionary Castro overthrew the U.S.-backed Cuban leader Fulgencio Batista and established Cuba as the first communist state in the Western Hemisphere. Americans, accustomed to worrying about the distant threat of the U.S.S.R., suddenly had a communist country just 90 miles off the coast of Florida. The Cold War, it seemed, could get hot.

One should not forget, Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said in July 1960, driving the point home, that now the United States is no longer at an unreachable distance from the Soviet Union as it was before.

U.S. policymakers got the message. And as they publicly declared they would not tolerate international communism in the Western Hemisphere, intelligence organizations got to work behind the scenes.

American intelligence first set out to neutralize the Castro threat with the CIA-led Bay of Pigs attack in 1961, developed under President Dwight D. Eisenhower. When that plan failed, according to ABC, U.S. military leadership decided it was their turn.

In 1962, General Edward Lansdale, the chief of operations for the anti-Castro Cuba Project, or Operation Mongoose, asked the Joint Chiefs of Staff for a brief but precise description of pretexts which would provide justification for US military intervention in Cuba.

In response, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, led by Gen. Lyman L. Lemnitzer, produced Operation Northwoods.

On March 13, 1962, Lemnitzer presented Operation Northwoods to Defense Secretary Robert McNamara. Approved by the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the document outlined a number of ways that the U.S. could incite a war with Cuba.

One plan suggested inventing well-coordinated incidents in and around Guantanamo to make it seem like the U.S. base was under attack. To make the attack seem credible, Operation Northwoods suggested using rumors, friendly Cubans, starting fires, and conducting mock funerals for victims.

Another proposed a Remember the Maine incident, referring to the U.S.S. Maine, which blew up under mysterious circumstances in Havana harbor in 1898 and gave the U.S. justification to go to war with Spain. The 1962 version of this plan, Operation Northwoods proposed, could be arranged in several forms.

The U.S. could blow up a US ship in Guantanamo Bay and blame Cuba. Or, they could blow up an unmanned vessel, then conduct a fake rescue operation. Casualty lists in US newspapers would cause a helpful wave of national indignation, the report noted.

Other suggestions in Operation Northwoods involved developing a Communist Cuban terror campaign in Florida or perhaps Washington D.C., sinking a boat of Cuban refugees (real or simulated), plotting public attacks on Cuban refugees, exploding bombs, and planting evidence that suggested that Cuba was plotting an attack in South America.

But perhaps the most ambitious plot in Operation Northwoods involved a civilian airliner. This plan proposed creating an incident which will demonstrate convincingly that a Cuban aircraft has attacked and shot down a chartered civil airliner.

The airline in question could be charted by fake college students or any groupings of persons with a common interest and convincingly painted to make it seem real.

In the end, however, Operation Northwoods never got further than a memo. According to ABC, President John F. Kennedy told Lemnitzer directly on March 16, 1962, that he had no plans to use any sort of force to take Cuba.

Operation Northwoods, all the crazy schemes they devised to invade Cuba, shocked him, horrified him, Oliver Stone, who directed the 1991 movie JFK and produced the documentary JFK Revisited: Through the Looking Glass, which suggested that the government killed the president, told Jacobin. Thats what he was dealing with a war-state mentality that came out of the 1950s.

For decades, according to James Bamford, who brought Operation Northwoods to light in his 2001 book Body of Secrets, the set of anti-Castro plots was stuffed into a drawer.

The reason these were held secret for so long is the Joint Chiefs never wanted to give these up because they were so embarrassing, Bamford told ABC, calling Operation Northwoods one of the most corrupt [plans] ever created by the U.S. government.

He added, The whole point of a democracy is to have leaders responding to the public will, and here this is the complete reverse, the military trying to trick the American people into a war that they want but that nobody else wants.

Though most of the leading players in Operation Northwoods have since died Kennedy, of course, was assassinated in November 1963 those close to the president have flatly denied any knowledge of the anti-Castro plot.

Ive never heard of Operation Northwoods. Never heard of it and dont believe it, Theodore Sorenson, Kennedys White House special counsel, told The Baltimore Sun in 2001. Obviously, it would be totally illegal as well as totally unwise.

And Robert McNamara, who allegedly saw the plan before the president, also denied knowing about it. I never heard of it, he told The Baltimore Sun that same year. I cant believe the chiefs were talking about or engaged in what I would call CIA-type operations.

As such, the legacy of Operations Northwoods is an appropriately mysterious one. Though it reflects Cold War tensions and fears about Cuba, it also reveals what methods American military brass were willing to consider. Had the operation succeeded, Bamford noted, the U.S. would have imposed military rule over Cubans.

Thats what were supposed to be freeing them from, he told ABC.

The only way we would have succeeded is by doing exactly what the Russians were doing all over the world, by imposing a government by tyranny, basically what we were accusing Castro himself of doing.

After reading about Operation Northwoods, see how British intelligence hoodwinked the Nazis with an ambitious plot dubbed Operation Mincemeat. Or, look through these false flag conspiracy theories that are totally false.

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Operation Northwoods, The US False Flag Plot To Incite A War With Cuba - All That's Interesting

Peacock Review: Lots of Free TV, But You’ll Need a Paid Plan to See Everything – CNET

Peacock, NBCUniversal's streaming platform, has experienced a surge in growth since its arrival on the scene in July 2020. Though not as large as some of its rivals, the platform looks similar toNetflix,Hulu,Disney PlusandHBO Max, with a tiled interface lined with famous network shows.

But unlike those other services, Peacock has a version that's completely free to watch with ads. In that respect it's similar tofree streaming servicessuch as Pluto TV, Tubi and Roku Channels, but with a better selection. Peacock's free tier offers about 40,000 hours of ad-supported content. You'll find shows, movies, news,live sportsand skit-style clips, with standouts including The Office, Parks and Recreation, Modern Family, 30 Rock and Downton Abbey: A New Era.

The catch? Many marquee series only include the first two seasons with the free tier -- you'll need to upgrade to Peacock Premium at $5 a month to binge it all. Popular shows like Bel-Air and Yellowstone also only offer one episode on the free tier, with the rest behind the Premium paywall. And some shows, like Parks and Recreation and The Office, are only available as complete series on Premium.

Peacock's live sports offering is a strength, although most live events require a Premium subscription. It has NFL Sunday Night Football, theUS Open,MLBon Sunday mornings, WWE wrestling, Premier League and more.

If you upgrade to the Premium tier ($5 a month or $50 a year, with ads) or the PremiumPlus tier ($10 a month or $100 a year), you'll get access to the full catalog of 60,000 hours of content. You'll also get next-day access to new episodes of all current NBC shows and even early access to Late Night with Seth Meyers and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon the night they air.

The free version of Peacock is worth exploring, but whether you're willing to pay $5 to $10 a month when you already have the other major streaming services will depend on how much you want to watch favorites like The Office, Yellowstone and live sports.

Read more:Peacock free or Premium? Ads or no ads? Here's how to pick the right streaming plan

I tested out Peacock's ad-supported free tier and its ad-supported $5-a-month Premium tier. (You don't need a credit card to sign up for the free account, just an email address, which is nice.) Peacock promises that you'll see 5 minutes or less of ads per hour across both ad-supported tiers.

My experience varied depending on the show and device. While watching The Hitman's Bodyguard on a Roku TV, there were six ads sprinkled throughout the film, ranging from 20 to 60 seconds each. Peacock even marks midroll ad breaks so you know when to expect them. But when it played on the iPhone app, there was a notice that we would watch 135 seconds of ads at the beginning, and none for the rest. That option would be great to have on the Apple TV too to get the ads out of the way, but unfortunately it's not (yet).

After scrolling around and watching a bunch of ads, when I went back to start The Hitman's Bodyguard again, there were no ads at all, because I had already seen 5 minutes' worth in the previous hour. It does seem like if you pop in and out of a movie or show, the ad count may reset.

On episodes of Saturday Night Live, there were seven to nine ads sprinkled throughout the episode on both mobile and TV. This is about the same ad experience as watching onHulu's $7-a-month ad-supported plan, or on regular live TV -- except it's free.

It's also worth mentioning that some subscribers to the most-expensive ad-free paid version will still see ads on "a small amount of programming, Peacock channels, live events, and a few TV shows and movies," according to Peacock.

Peacock's homepage and Browse section is similar to other streaming services. There's a big carousel of "hero" tiles at the top and rows of thumbnails below, labeled Peacock Picks, Continue Watching, Riveting Stories, Peacock Originals, Featured Films, What's Your Sign? and so on.For Pride Month, there's also some carousels highlighting LGBTQ movies and TV shows including Modern Family and Queer as Folk. You can also seamlessly search for specific titles, but if you type in "originals," it won't spit out a list of Peacock Originals.

Peacock does have a Kids page with a couple of shows like Barney and Curious George on its free tier, but its most popular shows, including Dreamworks' Dragons: Riders of Berk and The Croods: Family Tree, are only available with a paid subscription. Parents do have the option of setting a PIN-enabled parental lock to limit the age range of content displayed, but there's unfortunately no option to filter out Premium content, which may leave kids frustrated at how many shows are unavailable to them.

Premium shows are mixed in with free offerings, denoted by a little purple feather in the top left corner. It reminds me a bit of Amazon Prime Video, which has shows included in your subscription mixed in with those you have to pay extra for. The app isn't forceful in trying to get you to upgrade, though: You'll only be asked if you want to change to premium if you click on a premium-only show, or if you go to your Account page.

You can stream on up to three devices simultaneously from one account. One negative: Unlike on Netflix, there's no "skip intro" button, so you'll have to hear theme songs over and over unless you manually fast-forward.

One of Peacock's biggest advantages is its access to NBC's strong catalog of content, and its sister networks and entertainment properties, including Bravo, USA Network, Syfy, Oxygen, E!, CNBC, MSNBC and Universal Pictures. There's also some content licensed from rivals, including A&E, ABC, Fox, History, Nickelodeon, DreamWorks Animation, Focus Features and Lionsgate.

Some of the best shows available on the free tier now are Saturday Night Live, 30 Rock, and Downton Abbey and you get all seasons of each (with the exception of 30 Rock, which is missing one season). Upgrade to premium to get the complete run of older shows including Cheers, Frasier, House and Two and a Half Men. For some shows, however, you get only a recent handful of seasons or episodes, even on premium. For example, you'll only find a few episodes of This Is Us.

The catalog is far from complete, however. Some shows you might associate with NBC, like Friends, Seinfeld and Scrubs aren't on Peacock, and don't seem to be coming any time soon. So far, the most successful Peacock originals have been the Fresh Prince prequel drama, Bel-Air, and Bravo reality showsincluding The Real Housewives of Miami and The Real Housewives: Ultimate Girls Trip. None have garnered quite the same buzz as other streaming platforms' originals, such as Obi-Wan Kenobi on Disney Plus or HBO Max exclusive The White Lotus.

In the Movies category, you'll find hundreds of titles, organized by genre, franchise, or what's new in theaters. There are helpful carousels dedicated to '80s and '90s nostalgia, with titles including E.T., Back to the Future, Pretty Woman, and Schindler's List. And there are Peacock Originals such as Psych 3: This Is Gus.

However, Peacock's big-name movies don't alwaysstick around for long. The Twilight saga and Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy are set to leave Peacock at the end of June, for example. Others that have come and gone include Reservoir Dogs, Do the Right Thing and Phantom Thread. They may come back, though, a company representative said. And soon, you'll be able to see how long you have to watch a given movie before it expires across all platforms.

Peacock helpfully displays Rotten Tomatoes ratings, both showing the critics' score and the audience score. Movie thumbnails may include a red-tomato, "fresh" rating but don't display a score if the movie is rated "rotten." You can see the score for any movie with a Rotten Tomatoes rating, alongside the audience score, after selecting it. The platform has boasted some immediate streaming rights for theatrical releases, including Jennifer Lopez's Marry Me, Halloween Kills and 2022's Firestarter. In October 2022, Halloween Ends will have a same-day premiere on Peacock.

Michael Myers will close out the newest Halloween saga in theaters and on Peacock.

From Browse, you can navigate to the Channels section of the app, which is another hodgepodge of free content. Channels looks kind of like a cable box grid guide, but instead of various networks and cable channels, you get themed channels around Peacock's programming. These include NBC News Now, Best of WWE, Dateline 24/7, True Crime, and Today: All Day. In addition to more recent programming, some channels focus on older content, from Fallon Tonight, which shows old episodes of The Tonight Show, to SNL Vault, Classic TV, and the Bob Ross Channel. There is also Spanish-language content from Telemundo.

The biggest appeal to Channels for many will likely be its live sports and news programs, which offer a decent selection of live NBC programming without the need for a subscription. These include NBC News Now, Sky News, NBC channels for major cities like New York and Los Angeles, and NBC Sports. You'll also find NBC's new 24-hour version of the Today Show, calledToday All Day, though that includes repackaged Today segments and more lifestyle programming than straight news. However, unlike live TV streaming platforms such as YouTube TV or Hulu With Live TV, there's no option to record programming to a DVR.

Scroll through Peacock channels for 24/7 content.

While there's not too much to complain about in the free tier, the premium offerings still lack several features that competitors like Netflix and Hulu already have.

For one, mobile downloads are still limited to Premium Plus subscribers, the service's most expensive tier. Peacock also still lacks support for4K HDR videoorDolby Atmos, though the company says both of these are also on the future roadmap.

It's free, so why not try it out? If the ads bug you or you want to watch one of the original shows, you can try out its premium tiers free for seven days as well, orfind other dealsdepending on your platform and cable provider; somecable customers can get it for free.

Will Peacock make it onto your daily streaming routine, alongside Netflix and Hulu? Probably not, at least in the short-term. But is it a great free option for finding some older movies and shows you might have missed (or want to watch for the millionth time)? Definitely. If you don't mind watching a few ads, it's a fun place to explore older movies and a big mix of TV shows, and keep up with current NBC shows, news and some live sports in one spot -- especially if you're alreadya cord-cutterand looking to expand your options for free.

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From Software’s next game is in the "final stages" of development – Eurogamer.net

From Software's Elden Ring only released in February, but already its next game - still a mystery for now - is in the "final stages" of development.

As spotted by Gematsu (thanks, PC Gamer), back in 2018, studio boss Hidetaka Miyazaki said that "3.5" of the games the team was currently working on were unannounced, and 4Gamer reached out to ask Miyazaki on their progress.

Since that time, we've had Sekiro: Shadows Die Twice, PSVR game, Dracin, and Elden Ring, of course. That leaves just one mysterious game yet to be announced, which may or may not be that heavily-rumoured Armored Core instalment.

At the time, a player reported that they had received a consumer survey directly from the developer which offered plot details, eight screenshots, and even two videos about the unannounced sequel... which does indeed sound like a game in the "final stages" of development.

Whatever it is, though, Miyazaki says "development is currently in the final stages", and is already looking towards the "medium- to long-term" where he'd like to work "on a more abstract fantasy than anything we've done in the past", especially as not all the "ideas and images" from existing game development made it to the final versions.

Interestingly, some have been led by other directors, too.

"We're developing several titles by directors other than myself in addition to the titles that I'm directing, but we're not at the stage where I can share any details yet," he added, adding that when it comes to sequels, "there are merits to both taking over the numbering and creating a new work with a new title".

Miyazaki also confirmed - like other Japanese firms - From has pledged to address starting salaries, and will be increasing the (presumed, but not explicitly specified) monthly starting salary of new graduates to 260,000 - that's around 1500 - as well as make changes to its bonus structure.

As for what those that mysterious game may be about? Well, that's still a mystery for now. However, chances are it'll still feature challenging gameplay; Miyazaki has said that the challenge of From Software's game is "not something [the studio is] willing to abandon", even though he himself "dies a lot" in games.

"We are always looking to improve, but, in our games specifically, hardship is what gives meaning to the experience," Miyazaki said earlier this year. "So it's not something we're willing to abandon at the moment. It's our identity."

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From Software's next game is in the "final stages" of development - Eurogamer.net

Near-infrared light reduces glia activation and modulates neuroinflammation in the brains of diet-induced obese mice | Scientific Reports – Nature.com

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