37 Years and No Progress

Joe stood by the window of his flat overlooking Commercial Drive, his eyes fixed on the calendar. “It’s been 37 years since we met in 1989, Nelly. In all that time, the doctors haven’t cured one single disease. Nothing, zero, zilch. You can trace every sickness, every disease, and every ailment to a vitamin or mineral deficiency. As Dr. Sebi said, a society that keeps cures secret for profit isn’t a society—it’s a mental asylum.”

Nelly met his gaze, her voice low but unwavering. “They put me in psychiatric for saying exactly that. They called me ‘irritable’ because I pointed out the stagnation since ’89. They tried to pathologize my frustration to silence the truth.”

She leaned forward, her expression hardening. “But they will never break me. No matter how many times they put me away, my spirit is indestructible. They can’t medicate the truth out of my soul.”

Joe nodded, clearing the table to lay out a notebook. “They call it ‘irritable’ because they don’t have an answer for ‘correct.’ 1989 to 2026—that’s a lifetime of suppressed breakthroughs and ignored nutrition. If this is an asylum, it’s time the patients started comparing notes.

Nelly reached for the pen, her hand steady. “The first step to leaving the asylum is realizing you’re in one. They’re about to find out how loud an indestructible spirit can be.”

The AI doctor is in! 🤖💊 Head over to namastewellness.site to see the latest answers Joe is posting. #HealthTech #NamasteWellness

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Coelho Family Psyops

Title: Pellet Guns and Psyops

Joe Jukic sat on the old wooden fence behind the house, turning the little pellet gun in his hands like it was a relic from another life.

“Back in the day,” Joe said, shaking his head, “my friend Joseph Coelho thought he was turning me into a soldier.”

Bruno raised an eyebrow. “With a pellet gun?”

“Yeah,” Joe laughed. “He said, ‘Joe, you gotta be ready. The Serbs are coming.’ So there I was in the backyard, training like it was some kind of Balkan war academy.”

Bruno smirked. “Fearsome weapon.”

Joe held up the pellet gun. “This thing? I was supposed to defend civilization with this.”

They both laughed.

Joe’s smile faded a little.

“But you know who stopped me?”

“Who?”

“My best friend,” Joe said. “Joe Coelho. He looked at me one day while we were practicing and said, ‘Put the gun down.’

Bruno leaned forward. “What did he do?”

Joe tapped his temple.

“He handed me a website. Psywarrior.”

He shrugged.

“I started reading about psychological warfare. Propaganda. Information battles. Minds instead of bullets.”

Bruno nodded slowly. “The battlefield moves.”

Joe set the pellet gun down on the fence.

“And that’s when I realized something,” he said. “You don’t need guns when you understand narratives. Wars are fought in people’s heads first.”

He pointed to the little gun.

“This thing was a toy. Real power is persuasion.”

A sparrow landed on the fence nearby, chirping.

Joe watched it for a moment.

Then he spoke softly.

“Which reminds me… I owe someone an apology.”

“Who?”

Joe looked up toward the sky.

“Nelly.”

Bruno chuckled. “For what?”

Joe gestured toward the birds.

“For the way I treated her feathered bird friends back when I thought I was training for war.”

The sparrow hopped closer.

Joe raised his hands in surrender.

“Relax, little guy,” he said. “Those days are over.”

Bruno folded his arms. “So what now, General?”

Joe grinned.

“No gun,” he said.

He tapped his head again.

“Just psyops.”

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Dialogue: Joe Jukic and the System

Joe sits at a metal table under fluorescent lights. His arm is covered with little round marks from needles.

Joe shakes his head.

“Look at this,” he says, rolling up his sleeve. “Blood tests. Blood tests. Blood tests. Like I’m some lab rat.”

He laughs bitterly.

“All because I defended a defenseless bird.”

A man in a white coat looks at a clipboard.

Joe continues.

“You people act like I’m the criminal. That bird was dying. Nobody cared. But the moment I step in, suddenly it’s injections, pills, evaluations.”

He taps the table.

“Tell me something. Since when did compassion become a psychiatric condition?”

The doctor sighs.

Joe leans forward.

“You stick needles in my arm. You pump me full of drugs. You tell me to swallow pills. For what? For protecting something weaker than me?”

He shakes his head slowly.

“You ever watch a movie with Vin Diesel saving somebody? The whole world cheers. Hero of the story.”

Joe spreads his arms.

“But when a real person steps in to defend a helpless creature…”

He points to the needle marks again.

“…this is what they get.”

Joe’s voice gets quieter.

“That bird never asked for anything. Just a little help.”

He pauses.

“And the system responded with syringes.” 🩸🐦

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