Episode 28: The Buddha of Brassington

The Buddha of Brassington

In this Rogue Cast, recorded on Sunday, 7th January, I take a ramble around the hills near Carsington in Derbyshire.

 

The area has a long history of lead mining and the landscape is littered with the former workings and shafts.

Some three hundred years ago, the author Daniel Defoe was on a tour of the lands of Britain and described an encounter with a lead miner,

“He (the lead miner) was as lean as a skeleton, pale as a dead corpse, his hair and head a deep black, his flesh lank, and, as we thought, something of the colour of lead itself.” Daniel Defoe, 1727.

The ramble begins with me ruminating briefly over a journey I made to India and the Himalaya some years ago, how I studied the practicalities of Buddhism and the book  (Fuck the Buddha) that emerged from that time. It includes an explanation of the expression,

“If you meet the Buddha on the road, kill him.”

I then amplify my take on the current Prime Minister, Rishi Sunak the grifter without a soul.

It is a ramble that takes in lead mining, quarries, walking the walk, how the UK Gov is a captured operation, the trap of organised religion, Justin Welby’s knighthood for services to genocide, the industrial landscape of the Peak District, past and present, Bankster Greed, the one ring to control it all, the insatiable lust for power, genocide, a WW2 Royal Observation Corps watch tower, the former High Peak Railway, a mass shooting in a quarry and the monstrosity of wind farms, before closing the 6 mile circle.

Thank you for watching.


In the meantime, if you are able, please consider making a donation via the Buy Me a Coffee button in support of my work in exposing the Great British Mortgage Swindle and the other various scams that hold sway in this crazy realm. All the best to each and every reader, especially David R who has supported my efforts for a number of years now and a big thank you to those who have recently made donations.


Further reading:

“By the 1600s lead had become second in importance in the national economy only to wool. It was essential for the roofs of public buildings and the new houses being built in every part of the country by the nobility and gentry. All houses, including farmhouses and cottages by then, had glazed windows, with lead glazing bars. It was the only material for water storage and piping. Every army used it as ammunition. There was a thriving export trade as well as the home market and the Wirksworth area was the main source of the ore. The miners knew that the industry, as well as being vital to them, was important in the national economy and petitioned Charles I to recognise the fact by giving them two representatives in Parliament.”  Source

“The World War II Royal Observer Corps post at Brassington was opened in 1943 and was built to what became a standard RAF pattern. It became part of the ‘Granite’ system, a code for posts which were equipped with flares to warm friendly aircraft of high ground in poor visibility.” Source

The macabre collaboration of the Church of England with the genocidal WEF operation known as the UK Government

The 4 part series of articles on World Bank capture of your void mortgage:

Part 1 https://roguemale.org/2023/11/20/your-deed-of-mortgage-is-in-a-world-bank-foreign-vault/

Part 2 https://roguemale.org/2023/11/24/british-courts-under-foreign-control-pt-2/

Part 3 https://roguemale.org/2023/11/27/no-deed-no-possession-claim-pt-3/

Part 4 https://roguemale.org/2023/11/29/globalism-the-remedy-is-you-part-4/

 


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