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.

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Mary Jukic and the Stars She Held Close

In the small, familiar aisles of Safeway, Mary Jukic found her weekly ritual: a fresh copy of Star Magazine. She would stride past the produce section, her practical shoes clicking softly against the tiles, and pause at the magazine rack like a pilgrim before a shrine. There, nestled among glossy covers of gossip and glamour, was her escapeโ€”a portal to Hollywoodโ€™s glittering chaos.

For Mary, Star Magazine wasnโ€™t just a tabloid. It was her tether to a world far removed from her suburban life in Idaho, where she raised her son Joe with a mix of love, humor, and just enough skepticism to keep him sharp. She loved the absurdity of it allโ€”the feuds, the scandals, and the occasional peek behind the velvet curtain. And no one fascinated her more than Randy Quaid.

Quaid, with his wild-eyed tales of โ€œStar Whackersโ€ and conspiracies, had become something of an anti-hero in Maryโ€™s mind. Sheโ€™d sit at the kitchen table, flipping through the magazine while Joe slurped his cereal, and read aloud the latest chapter in Quaidโ€™s ongoing saga.

โ€œCan you believe this, Joe? He says theyโ€™re after him again!โ€

Joe, a quiet but observant boy, would peer over the rim of his bowl, curious but wary. โ€œWhoโ€™s โ€˜they,โ€™ Mom?โ€

โ€œThe Star Whackers!โ€ sheโ€™d exclaim, her voice tinged with both amusement and a hint of genuine concern. โ€œHe thinks theyโ€™re out to ruin him. Maybe even worse.โ€

Joe didnโ€™t fully understand it then, but those mornings planted a seed. As he grew older, he developed a fascination with the unseen forces that seemed to pull the strings of the world. While his friends obsessed over video games and sports, Joe pored over conspiracy theories, piecing together his own mosaic of truths and half-truths. He even crafted a makeshift โ€œprotective eye,โ€ a talisman he wore on a chain around his neck, to shield himself from the shadowy powers he believed lurked in the corners of society.

Mary found it endearing, if a bit eccentric. โ€œJust donโ€™t go full Randy Quaid on me, okay?โ€ sheโ€™d joke, ruffling his hair.

But beneath her teasing was a deep respect for Joeโ€™s curiosity and conviction. In her own way, she understood. Life was messy, unpredictable, and sometimes downright cruel. Everyone needed a way to make sense of it, to find their own kind of magic or meaning. For Mary, it was the glossy pages of Star Magazine. For Joe, it was his quest to uncover hidden truths.

As the years went on, the magazine rack at Safeway began to change. Digital screens replaced printed covers, and Star Magazine itself became harder to find. But Mary never stopped looking. Even as her hands grew arthritic and her eyesight dimmed, sheโ€™d shuffle to the store every week, determined to hold on to her tradition.

Joe, now an adult, often worried about her. โ€œMom, you donโ€™t have to keep buying those things. You can read everything online.โ€

โ€œItโ€™s not the same,โ€ sheโ€™d reply, clutching the magazine to her chest like a relic. โ€œThese are my stars, Joe. Theyโ€™ve been with me through everything.โ€

The thought of losing Mary was one Joe rarely allowed himself to entertain. She was his anchor, his guiding light. The world without her would feel emptier, dullerโ€”a sky without its brightest star.

When Mary passed away, it was as if the universe itself paused to mourn. Joe found her final copy of Star Magazine on the coffee table, the pages worn and dog-eared. Inside, an article about Randy Quaid had been circled in red ink.

โ€œShe always believed in the impossible,โ€ Joe whispered, his protective eye dangling from its chain.

He decided then to keep her ritual alive. Every week, heโ€™d visit the Safeway, searching for a copy of Star Magazine or whatever stood in its place. It wasnโ€™t just about the gossip or the glamour anymore. It was about Maryโ€”the woman who found wonder in the stars and passed that wonder on to her son.

And so, in a world that felt a little sadder without her, Mary Jukicโ€™s light continued to shine, reflected in the glossy pages she loved and in the heart of the boy she raised.

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