Monday, June 22, 2026

Sage of Quay Dispatch is Moving to Substack – Blogspot Version Retiring Early July 2026

 

After many years of running this Blogspot site, the time has come to sunset it.

Google has engaged in persistent shadow-banning and suppression that has made the blog virtually invisible in search results for quite some time now. Despite consistent, high-quality content and a loyal audience, the platform has increasingly limited visibility and reach. At this point, continuing to pour energy into a suppressed outlet no longer makes sense.

My primary home for the past couple of years — and the place where new content is published without interference — is my Substack

👉 https://sageofquay.substack.com/

All future articles, videos, interviews, and dispatches will appear there exclusively. If you’ve enjoyed the work here over the years, I strongly encourage you to subscribe (it’s free) and turn on notifications so you don’t miss anything.

This Blogspot site will be fully sunset (taken offline) in early July 2026. It will not remain as an archive.

To everyone who has read, shared, commented, and supported the work here — thank you. Your engagement has meant a great deal. The fight for truth, deeper understanding, and uncensored conversation continues — just on a platform that actually allows it to be seen.

See you on Substack.

Mike Williams
Sage of Quay
June 2026

Who Is Yoko Ono? Part 1 – with Matt Sergiou, Dom & Chris Waterson

In the first part of a new multi-episode series on Mike Williams’ Paul Is Dead Channel, hosts Matt Sergiou, Dom, and Chris Waterson explore Yoko Ono’s background and outsized influence. They trace her roots in the 1950s–60s avant-garde art scene and examine how her conceptual work and public persona helped shape (or were used to shape) the broader 1960s counterculture movement in the US and UK. The conversation goes beyond the familiar “she broke up the Beatles” narrative to discuss possible deeper institutional forces — including the CIA, Tavistock Institute, and Frankfurt School — that may have backed or amplified cultural shifts through figures like Ono. The episode sets the stage for a provocative re-examination of her legacy.

Israel Refuses to Accept Defeat in Iran War

In this interview on Mario Nawfal’s channel, The Grayzone’s Max Blumenthal argues that Israel and the US suffered a major strategic defeat in their recent military confrontation with Iran, yet Israeli leadership and aligned US factions refuse to acknowledge the reality. Blumenthal details how Iran’s resilience, missile capabilities, and survival of the campaign exposed limits of Israeli and American power, while the conflict has deepened divisions within the MAGA movement over “Israel First” foreign policy priorities. He critiques the push for further escalation, highlights the human and geopolitical costs, and warns of a dangerous cycle of endless wars driven by denial and domestic political pressures rather than clear-eyed assessment of outcomes.

7 Ways Smart People Handle Toxic People (Without Arguing)

In this PSYCH DOSE video, viewers learn seven practical psychological strategies that emotionally intelligent people use to protect themselves from toxic individuals — coworkers, friends, family, or partners — without getting drained or drawn into drama. The tactics include refusing to over-explain yourself (starving manipulators of fuel), detaching emotionally by pausing to ask if the behavior is about them or the other person’s issues, setting boundaries through consistent actions rather than announcements, creating strategic distance instead of trying to “fix” people, opting out of their drama competitions, observing long-term patterns over single incidents, and treating inner peace as a non-negotiable priority. Backed by insights on how toxic interactions raise cortisol and impair brain function, the video emphasizes self-protection, emotional maturity, and reclaiming control of your energy and mental health.

Every Proven Sleep Hygiene Hack Explained (No BS Version)

Chef Caleb delivers a no-fluff rundown of the most effective sleep hygiene practices backed by science and real results. Key hacks include cutting caffeine 8–10 hours before bed (its half-life quietly ruins deep sleep even if you fall asleep), keeping your bedroom cool (60–67°F / 16–19°C) so your body can drop core temperature, getting bright morning sunlight within the first hour of waking to lock in your circadian rhythm, taking a hot shower 60–90 minutes before bed to accelerate cooling, treating your bed as sleep-only (no work, scrolling, or TV), skipping late-night alcohol, maintaining the same wake time every day (even weekends), mouth-taping for nasal breathing, achieving total darkness, following the 20-minute rule if you can’t sleep, and eating dinner earlier. The video emphasizes that small, consistent changes compound into dramatically better sleep quality without needing gadgets or supplements.

The Selfish Mid-Song Walkout That Killed the Spin Doctors

This Guitar Meets Science video chronicles the meteoric rise and spectacular fall of the Spin Doctors, the early-90s jam-rock band behind the multi-platinum album Pocket Full of Kryptonite and massive hits “Two Princes” and “Little Miss Can’t Be Wrong.” It details their funky New York club origins, Epic Records’ shocking incompetence (including promo photos showing six people for a four-piece band), relentless van-touring grind, and the lucky MTV-fueled breakout. The story peaks with guitarist Eric Schenkman’s infamous mid-concert walkout in Berkeley—putting down his guitar and leaving the band onstage mid-show—which accelerated the band’s collapse amid burnout, poor label support, plummeting sales, and later personal tragedies like Chris Barron losing his voice. The narrator frames it as a classic tale of rock success undone by ego, bad decisions, and industry realities.

Right to Repair: Why Begging Government Isn’t the Fix

In this Solutions Watch episode from The Corbett Report, James Corbett dives into the right-to-repair movement — the push to restore consumers’ ability to fix their own cars, phones, tractors, and appliances without manufacturer barriers like restricted parts, software locks, withheld manuals, or design tricks that make repairs difficult. He explains the core problems (manufacturers prioritizing profits over owner rights, leading to a “replace” culture and e-waste) and the four pillars of repairability: access to information/tools/parts, no software locks, and repair-friendly design. While agreeing with the goal of a more sustainable “repair culture,” Corbett warns that the dominant strategy of lobbying governments for new laws carries risks and pitfalls; he explores alternative, voluntary approaches that better align with true ownership and self-reliance. The video includes real-world examples from the auto industry and urges viewers to think critically about top-down vs. bottom-up solutions.

What Are the Real Chances of Going Blind From Cataract Surgery?

In this straightforward video, board-certified ophthalmologist Dr. Ilan Cohen addresses the real (but rare) risks of cataract surgery head-on, without sugarcoating or scare tactics. He explains serious complications like endophthalmitis (devastating eye infection), retinal detachment, posterior capsule rupture, and surgical bleeding that can, in extreme cases, lead to vision loss or even loss of an eye. Dr. Cohen stresses that while these risks exist and are listed on consent forms as averages, the actual risk depends heavily on the surgeon’s experience, preparation, and techniques. He details safety protocols (pre-op mapping, antibiotics, sterile procedures, gentle techniques) and provides a practical checklist of questions to ask any surgeon: annual surgical volume, posterior capsule rupture rate, infection rate, fellowship training, and comfort with complex cases. The message is empowering: the procedure is quick, highly successful for most patients, and life-changing when done by the right hands.

Sunday, June 21, 2026

Anthropic’s Hype Machine Implodes: From God-Tier AI Launches to Swift Government Ban

In this sharp critique from Moon, Anthropic’s rapid ascent is dissected as the company positions itself as the world’s leading AI powerhouse with secretive “Mythos-class” models and the public release of Claude Fable 5 — a powerful but supposedly safeguarded version. The video highlights the dramatic three-day window before the U.S. government banned Fable 5 over a narrow jailbreak, exposing tensions between frontier capabilities and safety claims. It explores Anthropic’s pivot from calling for AI pauses to aggressive development and a near-trillion-dollar IPO, questioning the blend of doomer marketing, leaked “escape” stories, and massive funding rounds amid ongoing losses. The analysis portrays Anthropic as masterfully selling both the existential threat and the solution, while raising doubts about sustainability in the broader AI bubble.

How Modern Millionaires Hijacked Ancient Coats of Arms and Lost Histories

In this episode of CONSPIRACY-R-US, the host examines a pattern of 20th-century American elites building or “restoring” grand Tudor-style mansions while adopting historic European coats of arms that don’t seem to belong to them. Examples include Aldus Higgins using the crest of 1500s printer Aldus Manutius, Carl Weeks (a cosmetics magnate from modest roots) prominently displaying the ancient Weeks family heraldry at Salisbury House in Iowa, and similar heraldic displays at Virginia House and Agecroft Hall—structures officially “moved from England” or completed in the 1920s just before the stock market crash. The video questions whether these buildings are far older than official timelines claim, suggesting families with deeper, hidden American roots had their identities and histories quietly appropriated by new money figures to lend instant legitimacy and nobility.

How Post-WWII Bankers Built the Deep State Without Firing a Shot

On The Kim Iversen Show, journalist and author Mel K discusses her book Infiltration Instead of Invasion: America Betrayed (1944–1954), arguing that the real transformation of American power happened quietly in the decade after World War II. While the public celebrated victory and prosperity, a network of international bankers, intelligence figures, Wall Street lawyers (including the Dulles brothers), and global institutions quietly constructed parallel structures of control—through the Bank for International Settlements, Bretton Woods, the UN framework, and enduring financial and intelligence networks. Mel K explains how this “infiltration” model replaced overt conquest with technocratic, financial, and administrative dominance that operates above elected governments, creating the permanent managerial state many sense today. The conversation traces roots back to earlier banking cartels and wartime dealings, asking why policies feel unchanging across administrations and what it means for sovereignty in the modern era.

Why Stars Like Tay Keith & Oliver Tree Keep Getting Burned by Their Labels

This video from The Truth IS examines the recurring nightmare in the music business where massive artists and producers end up in bitter contract disputes with their labels over unpaid royalties and broken promises. It spotlights recent cases like super-producer Tay Keith’s public fight with Gamma Records over credits and millions owed from Sexy Red’s hits (just days before his tragic passing), and Oliver Tree’s dramatic split from Atlantic Records, complete with delayed albums, zero marketing support, and eventual independent release—followed shortly by his own sudden death. The analysis draws parallels to historical battles from Lil Wayne vs. Cash Money, Michael Jackson’s catalog wars, and Drake’s ongoing friction, arguing that the industry’s one-sided contracts are structurally designed to extract maximum value from talent while leaving artists with little leverage or long-term security.

Buttons for Eyes: The Occult Horror Lurking Behind Coraline’s “Kids’ Movie” Charm

In this deep-dive video from Esoteric Guardian, the 2009 stop-motion film Coraline is peeled back layer by layer to reveal a chilling folk-horror initiation ritual rather than a simple tale of family appreciation. The analysis explores the sealed door as a dangerous threshold (a reversed birth canal into a predatory realm), the handmade doll stitched in Coraline’s image as a sympathetic magic effigy used for surveillance and luring, the Other Mother as a soul-devouring spider-like entity who sews buttons over children’s eyes to claim them, and recurring symbols of doubles, mirrors, stolen souls, and changeling lore. What appears as whimsical fantasy is reframed as a story of abduction by something ancient and hungry—complete with a parasitic false paradise, ritual structure, and a severed hand that refuses to stay in the nightmare world—making Coraline one of the most disturbingly accurate depictions of occult child-theft mythology in modern media.