stock here: Professor Hamamoto is quite a character, he has a huge long white beard now. I didn’t realize until further research, he is a professor at UC Davis.
Note the numbers also, 11 and 8 are my numbers, and this event follows Fukushima on 311
I had AI summarize the transcript below the video.
Urban Shield and Militarization
The conversation begins by analyzing Urban Shield, a military training event involving international troops, including personnel from the U.S., Israel, and Gulf states. The exercises on the UC Berkeley campus, complete with live ammunition, are criticized for normalizing military operations in civilian spaces. This militarization is connected to the suppression of civilian rights, with implications of siege warfare tactics like food control being used to incite public unrest and justify martial law.
Occupy Movement and Suppression at UC Davis
The discussion shifts to the Occupy Movement, partly funded by George Soros’ Open Society Foundation. It is described as a “color revolution” orchestrated to destabilize institutions. Despite its peaceful nature at UC Davis, Chancellor Linda “PB” Ki is accused of authorizing excessive police force, including the infamous use of pepper spray (allegedly bear repellent), sparking global outrage. The incident symbolizes the broader agenda of suppressing dissent and eroding constitutional freedoms.
Ki’s administration is implicated in structural corruption, including:
Illegally enhancing salaries for family members.
Spending public funds to scrub the pepper spray scandal from the internet.
Engaging private attorneys for personal legal battles using taxpayer money.
Corruption and Foreign Influence
The broader narrative explores how universities are allegedly co-opted by foreign and domestic powers, including Jesuits and corporations like Monsanto, to push global agendas. Foreign students are trained to undermine their home countries economically and socially, perpetuating cycles of instability. The conversation ties these patterns to a centuries-long project of wealth and power consolidation through secret funding channels like Yamashita’s Gold, which allegedly bankrolls political interference worldwide.
Historical Context and Power Dynamics
The speakers delve into historical events like:
The Jesuits' role in shaping societal structures globally, particularly in Asia.
The secret treaty of Verona (1815) and its efforts to combat democratic movements.
Wealth stolen during World War II, including gold and treasures, being funneled into secret accounts to fund political overthrows and maintain authoritarian regimes.
This wealth, including Yamashita’s Gold, allegedly influenced U.S. politics, such as Richard Nixon’s presidency and the dominance of Japan’s Liberal Democratic Party.
Academic Repression and Resistance
UC Davis serves as a microcosm for these global dynamics. Dr. Hamamoto and Lauren Moray allege academic suppression, including efforts to silence dissenting voices exposing corruption. This repression aligns with what they describe as a broader shift toward Satanism and institutional degradation in higher education.
Despite these challenges, the speakers advocate for:
Transparency and Education: Exposing corruption to empower individuals.
Reclaiming Creativity: Encouraging intellectual and cultural renewal to counteract manipulative systems.
Reform: Calling for systemic investigations and changes in governance.
A Call to Action
The speakers highlight the urgency of addressing these issues by resisting authoritarian agendas and rebuilding societal structures. They express optimism for a renaissance in human creativity and advocate a peaceful but determined resistance to corruption.
In closing, the conversation emphasizes the need to uncover hidden power structures and restore humanity’s creative and intellectual potential.
This summary captures the complex interplay of topics discussed, including militarization, corruption, suppression of dissent, and broader historical narratives. Let me know if you’d like any further refinement!
Citations
FaviconWikipedia
UC Davis pepper spray incident – Wikipedia
The UC Davis pepper spray incident occurred on November 18, 2011, during an Occupy movement demonstration at the University of California, Davis.After asking the protesters to leave several times, university police pepper sprayed a group of student demonstrators as they were seated on a paved path in the campus quad. The video of UC Davis police officer Lt. John Pike pepper-spraying …
More
https://www.jstor.org/stable/42981740
FaviconCBS News
UC Davis Pepper-Spray Saga: 10 Years Later – CBS Sacramento – CBS News
November 18, 2021 — Infamous video captured an ugly chapter in UC Davis history as a campus police officer turned his pepper spray on non-violent student protestors as they sat in the campus quad.
FaviconUC Davis
Chancellor May’s Statement on 10-Year Anniversary of … – UC Davis
November 17, 2021 — On Nov. 18, 2011, I had just finished dinner with my family in Atlanta when I learned that protesting students at UC Davis had been pepper sprayed by campus police. I was simply stunned. I could not i…
FaviconTime
Pepper Spray Outrage at UC Davis: When Do Police Have the Right to Use …
November 21, 2011 — You can almost feel the sting in your eyes upon watching the videos: Dozens of seated, passive protesters at the University of California, Davis take multiple blasts of pepper spray to the face, all f…
FaviconThe Atlantic
4 Synchronized Camera Angles of the UC Davis Pepper Spray Incident
November 20, 2011 — James Fallows: “Pepper-Spray Brutality at UC Davis.” Alexis Madrigal: “Why I Feel Bad for the Pepper-Spraying Policeman, Lt. John Pike.” James Fallows: “The Moral Power of an Image: UC Davis …
FaviconThe Atlantic
Responses to the UC Davis Pepper Spray Video
November 20, 2011 — This footage of a police officer calmly pepper spraying students during a peaceful protest on November 18 at UC Davis went viral over the weekend, and now has over a million views on YouTube
FaviconUC Davis
Chancellor apologizes for pepper spraying – UC Davis
November 20, 2011 — Two other faculty groups — the Academic Senate, consisting of about 1,300 members, and the Academic Federation — are considerably larger. In all, UC Davis has more than 2,500 faculty members. In atten…
FaviconBBC News
Pepper spray: US campus police chief suspended – BBC News
November 20, 2011 — Footage of the pepper-spray incident shows protesters sitting in a line on the floor with their arms interlocked, refusing to move. … canisters of the spray on to them. David Buscho, a UC Davis …
FaviconChristian Post
Pepper Spray Incident at UC Davis Sees Police Officers Suspended (VIDEO)
November 19, 2011 — The incident occurred on Friday and the video was posted on YouTube. The university announced today that the two officers have been put on administration leave in light of the video. Two campus police…
FaviconInternational Business Times
UC Davis Pepper Spray Video: Criticisms Pour in, Chancellor Admits It’s …
November 19, 2011 — The UC Davis pepper spray video is so controversial that even the woman who ordered the police to forcibly remove the protesting students, as seen in the video, called it “chilling.”
FaviconCBS News
Video: Police pepper-spray passive students – CBS News
November 19, 2011 — Video of a tense standoff between police and Occupy demonstrators at the University of California, Davis shows an officer using pepper spray on a group of protesters who appear to be sitting …
FaviconWikipedia
UC Davis pepper spray incident – Wikipedia
The UC Davis pepper spray incident occurred on November 18, 2011, during an Occupy movement demonstration at the University of California, Davis.After asking the protesters to leave several times, uni…
FaviconJSTOR
CHAPTER ELEVEN: Militant Privatization: The UC-Davis Pepper-Spray Incident
The UC-Davis Pepper-Spray Incident Sarah Augusto and Julie Seteie On University Chancellor November
2 replies on “Review the 11-18-2011 Gassing of Students at UC Davis”
Seems like we’re closer, now, to events
like Mexico City, 1968, with 800(?) killed
In the protest in one day.
The movie “Gandhi” featured the British
massacre at Vrindaban, after which the
Commander said he wanted to inflict
a lesson that would have an impact on all of India. No meetings.
We will have A-Eye robots policing us.
My lifelong cynicism, fed by MAD magazine, says that they won’t have any
reason to tolerate masses or strikes or
protesters any more. Overpopulation and destruction of food, water, etc.
The Chinese find you guilty, and your
family is billed to pay for the bullet.
The suburban sprawl, the people so
vulnerable to cuts in their supply of everything, ignorant of their surroundings. No real community of
Mutual support, thought for crisis planning. The acting out of campus
protests, 2011, versus these last couple
years…
It’s predictable that they will use gas
and electronic means to knock out the
whole crowd, robots to haul away the
living and the dead. Nothing to see here
folks.
Indeed, whilst keeping up the illusion of free speech, and “freedom”, they wish to have iron clad control without the chance of meaningful dissent, and beyond that they don’t even want to hear the complaints of their annoying slaves that they can’t replace with robot soon enough.