Revolution in Babylon

Joe leaned against the old jukebox in the studio, smiling at Nelly Furtado.

โ€œTell me something, Nelly,โ€ he said. โ€œBack in high schoolโ€ฆ you were obsessed with The Beatles, werenโ€™t you? The worldโ€™s first real boy band.โ€

Nelly laughed. โ€œObsessed might be the right word. My friends and I had posters everywhereโ€”John Lennon with the round glasses, Paul McCartney with that sweet face, George Harrison looking mysterious, and Ringo Starr just beingโ€ฆ Ringo.โ€

Joe nodded thoughtfully.

โ€œYou know,โ€ he said, โ€œI always had this crazy idea. If I could hijack Lennonโ€™s peaceful revolutionโ€”love, music, peace signs, the whole thingโ€”I might impress you.โ€

Nelly raised an eyebrow. โ€œHijack it?โ€

Joe shrugged. โ€œNot steal it. Justโ€ฆ remix it. Lennon had the message: imagine no war, imagine people living as one. But I figured if a guy could actually live that message, maybe a girl who grew up loving the Beatles would notice.โ€

Nelly smiled, remembering.

โ€œBack then,โ€ she said, โ€œit felt like those songs could change the world. When Lennon sang โ€˜Give Peace a Chanceโ€™ or โ€˜Imagine,โ€™ it felt bigger than pop music.โ€

Joe grinned.

โ€œExactly! I figured if I could start a little peaceful revolution of my ownโ€”maybe with a jukebox, some good people, and a lot of musicโ€”you might think, โ€˜Hey, this guy gets it.โ€™โ€

Nelly laughed softly.

โ€œSo all this time,โ€ she said, โ€œyour grand strategy to impress me wasโ€ฆ becoming a bootleg disciple of John Lennon?โ€

Joe tipped an imaginary fedora.

โ€œGuilty. Every revolution needs a good soundtrack.โ€ ๐ŸŽถโœŒ๏ธ

Operation Storm

Joe and Nelly talk about Operation Storm and the Virgin Mary psyop

Joe:
Nelly, when people talk about Operation Storm, they usually talk about tanks and generals. But I always think about the deeper storyโ€ฆ the people from that land, like Nikola Tesla.

Nelly:
The electricity genius?

Joe:
Yeah. Tesla was born in Smiljan. His family were Serbs from the Krajina region. A Krajina Serb who helped electrify the world. That same region later became the center of the war during the breakup of Yugoslavia.

Nelly:
The same territory that became the Republic of Serbian Krajina?

Joe:
Exactly. Then Operation Storm happened and everything collapsed in a few days. The capital Knin fell, and hundreds of thousands of civilians fled.

Nelly:
That must have left a lot of trauma.

Joe:
It did. But listen to this part. In 1998 I had this strange moment with my cousin. We were talking about the war, and it felt like a mind meld. Like I could read what he was thinking without him saying it.

Nelly:
A mind meld?

Joe:
Yeah. And what I picked up from him was this idea: instead of fighting each other, people needed something sacred and shared to calm everything down. Something powerful in peopleโ€™s imagination.

Nelly:
Like what?

Joe:
Like a psychological operation built around the Virgin Mary. The idea was that if people believed heaven itself was watching the regionโ€”Croats, Serbs, everyoneโ€”it might cool the anger. Faith as a peacekeeping force.

Nelly:
So instead of propaganda for warโ€ฆ propaganda for peace?

Joe:
Exactly. Not to manipulate people, but to remind them of something bigger than the conflict. The Balkans are full of churches, monasteries, and centuries of belief. My cousinโ€™s idea was that the same spiritual symbols that divide people could also keep them from killing each other.

Nelly:
Thatโ€™s a very Balkan solutionโ€”history, religion, and psychology all mixed together.

Joe:
Yeah. Tesla showed the world electricity. But maybe the Balkans also understand something elseโ€”how powerful belief is in the human mind. Sometimes belief can start warsโ€ฆ but sometimes it can stop them too.

37 Years and No Progress

Joe stood by the window of his flat overlooking Commercial Drive, his eyes fixed on the calendar. “Itโ€™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 societyโ€”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 canโ€™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 2026โ€”thatโ€™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 youโ€™re in one. Theyโ€™re about to find out how loud an indestructible spirit can be.”

The AI doctor is in! ๐Ÿค–๐Ÿ’Š Head over to namastewellness.site to see the latest answers Joe is posting. #HealthTech #NamasteWellness

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