Heaven's lake? This is that famous lake on the border between China and North Korea. As I mentioned in a previous podcast, it looks like Garibaldi lake in Squamish. I want to go there.
Your alternate news source. Connecting the dots between politics and organized crime.
Let the Ghetto Gospel go forward into every hood possible." Ja Rule
Getting the Gangsters out of Government. Podcast - Vlog
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Netanyahu, Somalia and a dirty Agenda
Somalia and the UN are freaking out over Israel's public recognition of a Somali breakaway called Somaliland. So why is an Israeli Neo Con supporting an Islamic State again? Some are worried he wants to relocate the inhabitants of Gaza there.
I guess eviction is better than genocide but it's still a defiant violation of Moses' commandment to vex not the stranger that sojourneth with thee. Theft is very ungodly.
The president of Somalia doesn't want Netanyahu to export his problems there. So that's why he's supporting a breakaway coup in Somalia just like he did with the M23 invasion in Congo.
We are reminded of the private company in Israel filled with Intelligence officers from Mossad that bragged about fixing elections all over Africa. That is illegal foreign interference. Fixing elections is ungodly. So is genocide.
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Ontario Police seize 102 kilos of cocaine
The York Regional Police are reporting that "Investigators with the York Regional Police Major Projects Unit have charged four men and two women after seizing 102 kilograms of cocaine, a loaded firearm and over $135,000 in cash following a three-month investigation."
"Between October and December 2025, nine search warrants were executed at four residences and five storage lockers across the cities of Toronto, Vaughan and Barrie, as well as the towns of Espanola and Innisfil. An additional search warrant was executed at the Beaver Creek Institution in the Town of Gravenhurst. As a result of the search warrants and seizures, multiple charges were laid."
Ontario makes another drug bust. BC doesn't. Repeat.
Netanyahu, Donald Trump and Alex Jones
Once again the mentally deranged frenzy rages on. Alex Jones has completely lost his mind and is providing yet another circus side show distraction for the Neo Con take over of Israel and the United States. Trump is still pushing for Netanyahu's pardon. That is organized crime. There is a huge difference between supporting Israel and supporting a devious Neo Con who benefited from the murder of Yitzhak Rabin. Neo Cons are bad. It doesn't matter what country or religion they're from.
Neo Cons use false flag attacks to justify removing civil liberty and turning everyone into slaves. Far left and far right are the same thing. Then you have the toxic frenzy of rage and denial all over social media. Charlie Kirk was not shot with a 30-06.
Monday, December 29, 2025
AI Beats: Jah light never fades
Saturday, December 27, 2025
Seymour First Peak 2025
I went snowshoeing on Seymour this morning. This is the sunrise from Brockton Point. There was blue sky on one side and a very dark cloud that passed over on the other side.
Visibility after First Peak was a bit sketchy and the trail wasn't very well traveled so I stopped just past First peak. First hike of the season I need to ease into it. Nice to see the snow again.
The snow was very nice. Two weeks ago there was almost no snow. Today was awesome. Just as I was coming down from First peak three ladies from Ireland were coming up. One was from Dublin and the other two were from Monaghan county.
Friday, December 26, 2025
New Insights from Zen and the Art
I had mentioned that I bought a new copy of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance and am rereading it to see how I relate to it now that I am older and I think I have to make a few clarifications right up front from the get go.
I had always said that book had a profound influence on my life growing up although I don't think I ever read it. I liked motorcycles and I liked Zen. I think that's as far as I took it.
As for a complicated definition of quality, I don't think that ever entered my mind. I do remember the beginning of the book which talked about how when you are driving a car you experience your surroundings from the outside like you are watching them on TV. While on a motorcycle you are in the frame experiencing it first hand.
I agree. That's kind of zen. Experiencing it instead of talking about it. For me it was about traveling and camping while riding a motorcycle. Ted Simon wrote a book Jupiter's Travels.
He rode a motorcycle literally around the world. I totally respect that. For me it was about seeing new places and meeting new people. Elspeth Beard wrote a book Lone Rider about her motorcycle trip around the world before cell phones and GPS. I actually did an interview with her.
In my mind that was impressive. That was living the dream. Robert Pirsig added a more complicated literary and philosophical twist which can ad to or distract from the journey.
For example, I recently mentioned how in the introduction to the 25th anniversary edition of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance Robert Pirsig mentioned how things can be hidden from the reader when the book is written from the First Person narrative. This is where we get into literary works as opposed to motorcycle journeys.
He mentions Phaedrus and the narrator and the struggle between the two. Yet Phaedrus represents him and he is the narrator. Confused? Well seemingly Robert Pirsig was at one time institutionalized for schizophrenia and under went shock therapy for it. So his book and his motorcycle trip was a way for him to process his trauma. Which brings us back to the wind therapy mentioned in the Florian Knights documentary.
In that movie they conducted an experiment. They hooked the riders up to electrodes and measured their brainwaves. They discovered that as you ride a motorcycle, other distractions or worries tend to disappear and you tend to focus exclusively on the road ahead. This is why wind therapy is good for processing trauma. That's about as far as I go with it.
I'm not on a Monty Python quest for the meaning of life because I found it. Life is simple. Be good, do good. As you sow so shall ye reap. Life does not end at death. Families are important. No other success compensates for failure in the home.
Our greatest joy in life can be found in spending time with our family. That's not to say people who are single and don't have kids can't experience joy. Not at all. Be good, do good. Martin Luther King said anyone can be great because anybody can serve. When we serve others we forget our problems and become healed. So it's really that simple.
Zen can apply to anything - Buddhism, Christianity, even the game of Tennis. The inner game of tennis was simply a text about right brain versus left brain in sports.
As for Buddhism, Buddha was a rich kid who left the ivory tower and saw suffering in the world. As a result he was filled with compassion. Thus the term the compassion of Buddha. There's no conflict or struggle between Buddhism and Christianity. The golden rule exists in all religions.
Kal Dosanjh recently made a post on Linkedin of a group of small minded white guys doing a deranged version of the Haka in the face of a Sikh gathering. It was very disturbing because they appeared to claim to be Christian but their actions were far from it. First of all the Haka comes from Maori tradition. Those while trash expropriated it for a bad purpose.
Second of all, Christ said love your neighbor. When asked who is my neighbor he gave the parable of the Good Samaritan. Christ chose someone from a different race and a different religion the locals hated. Then said this guy did good. He is a better neighbor than you are. I have a hard time with Christian intolerance. It's very hypocritical.
The book Zen and the Art is an inquiry into values. You don't need to have a religion to have morals. The purpose of religion is to aspire to something higher and raise our morality.
Obviously I would see the struggle Robert Pirsig mentioned between Phaedrus and the Narrator as a profound allegory of the mainstream media and I'm going to set the schizophrenia thing aside because that's far beyond me. Life is simple and so am I. Ride hard, die free. Don't let life pass you by.
Thursday, December 25, 2025
50th Anniversary of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
An Inquiry Into Brilliance: One Last Ride With Robert Pirsig
In the introduction to the 25th anniversary edition of Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, Robert Pirsig makes some profound observations. He talks about a university class he took in the /50's about Henry James' The Turn of the Screw.
The professor talked about how a second completely different interpretation was also plausible. Robert said he had to reread the book to see it. He explains how things can be hidden from the reader if the book is written in the First Person narrative. The first person only tells you what they want you to see.
He states that in the book Turn of the Screw, the reader does not see that the governess is the villain not the hero because what the governess sees is all the reader ever sees. It's very interesting. Then he relates it to his story about Phaedrus which I obviously haven't read. It also relates to our present political climate of misdirection. History is written by the victors.
Pirsig mentions the Hollywood ending in his book and states "In the intended ending it is not the narrator who Triumphs over a villainous Phaedrus. It is an honorable Phaedrus who triumphs over the narrator who has been maligning him all the time."
"In Phaedrus's view the narrator is a sellout, a coward, who has abandoned truth for popularity and social acceptance. He sees that the narrator doesn't want to be honest any more, just an accepted member of the community, bowing and accommodating his way through the rest of the years."
"Phaedrus was dominated by intellectual values. He didn't give a damn who liked or didn't like him. He was single mindedly pursuing a truth he felt was of staggering importance to the world. The world had no idea of what he was trying to do and it was trying to kill him for his trouble. For more on the real Phaedrus, who is not a villainous ghost but rather a mild mannered hyper intellectual let me recommend Lila, a sequel that has been properly understood by a few."
Wow, Robert Pirsig wrote a sequel called Lila which examines life's essential issues as he recounts the journey down the Hudson River in a sailboat of his philosopher-narrator Phaedrus. Awesome. I just ordered it. Zen and the Art was written in 1974. That was over 50 years ago. Lila was written in 1991.
My kids are trying to teach me how to use Chat GPT. AI can be a useful tool to learn languages but it does frighten me.






















