JUAN O SAVIN- SPY vs SPY LAND Politics and Parasites- NINO 8 29 2025

14 days ago
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Juan explains to Nino how the Politics that we have right now, in the headlights and the headlines are a SPY vs SPY scenario.
President Trump is making it as easy to understand and possible but.. this is on every level of the CABAL. The Personal lives involved are getting complicated. Juan also describes the Banking system and the way it will effect us.
Gold standard and more concisely it has to do with International Intrigue.
As we go forward just watch who comes out winning.
Trump has a great team and over the next two months the trials will start.
Then the arrests late October.
The health aspect we must be aware some of this may be raining down on us.
Drones with sprayers can be used for distributing parasites that we have defenses over.
Much of this is SPY vs SPY. And our Children are most vulnerable. Parasites are doing much more damage these days. And it is a very crazy reason. Juan has entered this battlefield.. we can no longer ignore this.
The cheat sheet is being sold with Japanese American Kid by the Side of the Road here: https://allpatriots.gumroad.com/l/parasiteprotocolbundle?layout=profile
Spy vs. Spy is a wordless black and white comic strip that has been published in MAD magazine since 1961. It was created by Antonio Prohias, a Cuban national who fled to the United States in 1960 days before Fidel Castro took over the Cuban free press. The comic features two spies, Black and White, who are constantly warring against each other, and coming up with increasingly sophisticated ways of doing away with the other.

They are made to look virtually identical: trilby hats, overcoats and long pointed noses (possibly plague doctor outfits). The only difference between them are the color of their clothes: one dresses in white, the other in black.

A typical plot would be one spy setting up a booby trap for the other to fall into and die. Sometimes the trap works, but sometimes the other spy comes up with a brilliant counter plan of his own and will be the final winner. In other cases, the losing spy will use a plan B to counter the other spy's counter. Frequently, the winning spy celebrates his victory with a V sign gesture toward the loser. Some of the early cartoons published in 1961 had both spies coming up with the same plan to trap the other, the result being a draw. But these were the exception rather than the rule and most of the time one antagonist would beat the other.

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