
Dr. John Reizer
Isn’t life a mystery? I mean you never truly know where your journey through the construct will take you.
I was a pretty weird kid in some respects growing up, in my opinion, compared to other children in my age group.
But in looking back, I was also normal in many other respects. What is normal anyway? Is it something that measures a person’s sanity or lack thereof or a mathematical equation that calculates where a percentage of things lie compared to others?
Besides communicating with an alter ego beginning in 1973 called Michael Morris, who gave me tremendous insight into how the realm works, I was self-absorbed in sports, more specifically baseball.
There was a time when baseball was the most important thing in my life. I’m not kidding when I write that I ate, slept, and breathed this sport.
In 1975, I played in the Little League World Series (LLWS) in Williamsport, Pennsylvania. My team won the tournament and before I was thirteen years old my life drastically changed.

That baseball game was televised nationally, and over a hundred million people watched it. I would write a book about the experience a few years later.

Ah, baseball, what a fantastic game. Often referred to as America’s favorite pastime, this sport requires its participants to possess exceptional eye and hand coordination, extraordinary twitch muscles, and a strong throwing arm.
Baseball provides spectators with nonstop suspense and many tension-filled scenarios, with short bursts of action in between. The tensions produced by the game’s progression wax and wane throughout the nine-inning contest.
Lakewood, NJ Wins LLWS!

But is America’s favorite game something more sinister than how it’s presented?
Is the numerology affiliated with the sport of baseball giving us a clue about its occult origins?
Does the shape and design of the playing field, a diamond, give us a vital clue about this game that millions upon millions of people obsess over, especially in America?
A Civil War general, Abner Doubleday is often credited with inventing baseball in 1839. Isn’t it amazing how virtually no sports existed until the 1800s? What the heck did people do for fun? Maybe it’s hard to have fun after a cataclysmic event or reset!
Baseball historians disagree, however, who the real inventor of the sport was.
When you look at the game objectively, it’s damn hard not to notice baseball’s likeness to Freemasonry.
Is that what’s going on here? Is this game a Masonic ritual that captures the energy of millions of spectators daily for 8 months a year?
What are your thoughts about America’s favorite pastime and possible connection to Freemasonry?
Check Out Our book!
Do you want to learn what’s happening in the realm or continue living in ignorant bliss?

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This book ties everything together
While most people are preoccupied with a plethora of nonsense and other storylines intentionally placed in the mainstream news to keep them disconnected from more vitally essential subjects, a small percentage of the general public has awakened and swallowed the red pills.
Our book is written primarily for them — the red pillers! We believe The Matrix Reloaded Yet Again will be an essential starting point for readers, who can do more extensive boots-on-the-ground research after reading our work.
— Chris Kelly, Melissa Reizer & John Reizer
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I believe that the file was removed by the Rumble platform, Kenneth.
It works on my end?
I can’t get the link to work. I get a 404 error.
Anyone else try?
It used to be so bad (the snow) that we needed a shovel. 🤣
With three (sometimes four with PBS) networks and only maybe five picture perfect (no HD) – – – many shows had a lot of snow involved. ~ijs
Thanks for sharing, Roark! I’m always open to learning more. 👍🙂
John
Hi John,
No doubt you’re already up on this, but this ties right into the resets, cloning, and falsified timelines:
Nikola Tesla a MYTH? Tartarian Empire Erased & Global Cloning Exposed!
https://rumble.com/v6zqofk–shocking-revelations-nikola-tesla-a-myth-tartarian-empire-erased-and-globa.html?e9s=src_v1_ucp_a
Regards,
Roark
That’s a great question, Ellie. 👍
In 1975, the United States had only three major national over-the-air broadcast networks (ABC, CBS, and NBC), as well as the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS).
To answer your question, only one game in the LLWS tournament was televised: the championship game.
When people in America turned on their TV, they had access to three major stations. The LLWS was always on ABC, and if you lived in America, and you put on ABC during that game, that’s what was on the air.
Nowadays, there are hundreds of stations, and many LLWS tournament games are televised on various ESPN feeds. ESPN wasn’t created until many years later.
American television was much different in those days, and the stations signed off after midnight and came back on the air in the mornings.
John
How many of the LLWS games were televised in 1975?
The baseball experience allowed me to open up and set me on the path to becoming the communicator I am today. Looking back, I must say that experience was probably one of the most significant events in my life, and it occurred at the age of twelve.
The Matrix is a mysterious place for sure, Lisa. 🙂
John
Individuality is not weird, John. 🙂
It’s so great that baseball was something that helped you to open up to more experiences. I bet it set you soaring in many directions in your life.
Although I can’t say that I know much about baseball myself. But I do think that Freemasonry could be being displayed in more places than we realize.
Lisa
The following statement you provided says a lot.
“Nothing is really hidden, but you must have eyes to see.”