Until we meet again

As they say in some circles, it looks like we are “going dark” here until further notice. Since we have all been more or less programmed to have attention spans of 3 seconds, I will not blather on incessantly this week like I did last week. That information should keep you busy for some time anyhow.

I will recommend some additional reading and will ask you to consider for what we should strive in the future. I am reaching out of the paper at this time and shaking you to make you realize that the corporate media is up to NO GOOD. Toss that TV!

On a more tender note, I would like to thank all who have made my time here at the Community News wonderful and challenging all at once! [Editor’s Note - We plan on returning soon].

If I listed everyone, I would never leave the computer so I shall tip my hat to “Mom & Pop” stores at this time. I have interviewed and come into contact with many fascinating people over the years as well; my life has been enriched by this in ways that cannot fully be expressed without tears falling to my keyboard and causing a computer “situation” to unfold.

I will plead with you at this time to seriously consider the test that was mentioned last week in my term paper—I mean column. Here is some additional reading and a recommendation for a website or two or three! I will put this in parenthesis right now so I can at least keep up the tradition.

(Virus Mania by Torsten Englebrecht, Claus Kohnlein, Forwards by Etienne de Harven, MD pioneer in virology, Jocchim Mutter, MD expert on environmental medicine. Bechamp or Pasteur, A Lost Chapter in the History of Biology, by Ethel D. Hume. Virus Mania YouTube video presented by Carolyn Markolin. “War is a Racket,” by General Smedley Butler. “Where Did the Towers Go?” by Dr. Judy Wood, the only person to date to carry out a forensic investigation into what happened to all World Trade Center buildings on September 11, 2001)

THE END