Was 'Dr' Michael Mosley a spook who faked his own death?
Article by James Delingpole
This ‘click-bait-y’ headline is plagiarised shamelessly from a superb piece by the ever-perceptive Miriaf. As so often with Miri’s work, it’s the best thing you’re likely to read on the subject - that subject in this case being the mysteriously-disappeared-on-a-Greek-island-and-now-apparently-dead ‘TV doctor’ Michael Mosley.
Here’s an appetite-whetter:
I put it to you, therefore, that actually he isn't dead at all, but rather, having recently turned 67, has reached retirement age, and thus, the end of his employment contract with MI5.
His obligations to infiltrate the media sphere as a "doctor", and cynically send the masses off to the slaughter house ("trust me, I'm a doctor!" - he literally made a TV show with this name) have been completed, so the intelligence agencies bankrolling his career have staged his high-profile "death", equipped him with a new identity, and enabled him to sail off into the sunset to enjoy his retirement years - and an enormous personal fortune - without ever being held accountable for what he did.
Although I think Miri’s piece is well worth your time, I do appreciate that for some it’s going to prove a bridge too far. “This is the kind of wild, paranoid speculation that gives the Awake movement a bad name”; “Not everything is a Conspiracy Theory”; “Too soon”; and so on. I made those quotes up but they are, I think, fairly typical of what I like to call the ‘purple-pilled’ mentality.
That is, they are characteristic of the kind of people who, though fully cognisant of the fact that some conspiracies are real - the plandemic and the roll-out of the death jabs, say - still insist on keeping at least one foot in Normie land by peremptorily and ostentatiously rejecting any conspiracies they deem too outlandish. Purple-pilled is what you become when you can’t stop mixing up your red pills with the occasional blue one.
Look, I don’t know everything either and I’m quite sure there is all manner of nonsense I currently believe that I will later discover to be untrue. (It’s an ongoing process of discovery, once you’ve started down the rabbit hole…). But I do think it’s more likely than not that Miri is on the right track.
Partly, I think this because there are so many obvious holes in the official narrative; partly, because of the occult symbolism with which - as They always do: revelation of the method - They have barded the timeline (eg that he was ‘last seen’ at 13.30); partly because some of the details - the ridiculous umbrella, for example - are so flagrantly indicative of fakery; but mainly because once you pass a certain point on your journey to discover the truth about the world you start to recognise the familiar tells and realise that this is just how They roll.
The first rule of Truth Club is that if it is being as heavily promoted in the mainstream media as this Mosley story is then almost everything you read and hear will be a lie or a misleading half-truth. The second rule of Truth Club is that the fake story will have been placed there in order to distract you from something much more important, real and threatening to your way of life. (My guess is the end of the petrodollar, which has had remarkably little coverage. But it could as well be any number of other dreadful things coming our way. It’s not like there’s any shortage, is it?)
They, whoever They are, have done a very good job of this one because everyone’s talking about it - even Americans who have never heard of Michael Mosley; even staunch red-pilled types who profess to despise and reject the obvious fraudulence of BBC promoted Change Agents who shilled for the death jab.
But the Awake types declaring publicly how utterly uninterested they are in this confected nonsense are playing just as much an allotted role in this saga as all the Normies weeping Death-of-Diana-type tears for the lovable TV doctor they never knew. Their job is to keep the story alive by poo-pooing it; or by coming up with ludicrous, hopium-style speculation, like the suggestion that ‘Dr’ Mosley might have been bumped off because he was about to ‘blow the whistle’…
Yeah, right. I can believe almost anything about the Michael Mosley affair. But the notion that this superficially amiable, chameleon agent for the Forces of Darkness was bumped off because he ‘knew too much’ or because he had had a change of heart and was about to ‘reveal all’ is the purest ‘the White Hats are coming to save us’ delusional drivel.
Everything is a conspiracy. There are no accidents. And no White Hats.
Sorry but there it is.
Article by James Delingpole
James Delingpole is a writer, broadcaster and truth seeker. He hosts the Delingpod - the world’s most entertainingly shambolic ‘conspiracy’ podcast.