Sunday, August 18, 2019

Penelope Prepares For The Return Of Odysseus - The Tale Of Jeffrey Epstein In Detroit - Part One

I really do not care about this LARP.

Yes, I called it a LARP.

It really does not matter if he is living or dead because we are dealing with "Legal Geniuses" (trademark pending) and the investigation is continuing onto the co-conspirators.


So, in watching this video, I found Michael Baden, the world renowned forensic pathologist who has commented on notable individuals like John F. Kennedy, Michael Brown, and Jeffrey Epstein.



But of course, I went for his first wife.

The first wife is always the one who can provide the origins of an individual's motivation, but I did not get that far.

Michael Baden's first wife was Judianne Densen-Gerber.

She founded what I like to call the first residential institution for tiny human lab rats, labeled as abused and neglected, in Flint, named the Odyssey House, a Lebensborn Model.

"I hear a future lab rat for sale in my Mommy's tummy!"
Flint and Saginaw Odyssey House drug and alcohol treatment programs continue as the heart of the Odyssey Village’s holistic and comprehensive recovery management service array. In addition to providing residential and outpatient drug and alcohol treatment services in both Flint and Saginaw, the Odyssey Village includes a virtual village of services that recognizes addiction as a chronic problem that requires a long term relationship through a therapeutic community.

The Odyssey Village is a drug-free comprehensive recovery community that serves as a microcosm of society. Our holistic person approach challenges participants to be economically self-reliant, develop positive character , and become spiritually, physically, emotionally, and psychologically healthy in a lifestyle of sobriety.

These are the new human plantations for live human subject biogenetic and psychological experiments using their acquired goods through corporate parental rights to conduct pharmaceutical and epigenetic trials.

I keep telling everyone that slavery was never abolished, nor was using "The Poors" as a human usufruct through the chattels.

Odyssey_atom_short_med_res.jpg
Nuclear, Public Private Partnerships, children.


"The goal is to change one person’s life, which will affect not only their family, but their community and future generations."

You prop up and compromise your chosen "Elected Ones" who would do anything to get that life time pension check of public office to keep their water from shutoff.

You target a population.



You start designing tests to run on your population and get a federal grant to conduct the experiments.

You generate some crappy predictive model to support your crappy Social Impact Bond program to help vulnerable populations on your human experiments.

https://www.cenikor.org/
https://pdf.guidestar.org/PDF_Images/2017/760/031/2017-760031861-0ef3e62d-9.pdf
http://insidedp.com/news/dp-news/715-cenikor-foundation-teams-with-odyssey-house

You creatively bill Medicaid, alot.

You funnel the money, before the low levels administrators of the experiments stuff their pockets to stay dumb, fat and happy, overseas through a fake ass child welfare NGO, then run it back into the U.S. to fund political campaigns to make sure you can keep procuring those federal contracts to get more grants to run more dumb ass human experiments to keep on stealin'.

Stealin' is generational.

Stealin' is a residual of the peculiar institution.

Stealin' is the work of the Lord in the salvaging of souls.

That is how these people have souls, stealin'.

Linda Kenney Baden Portrait With Dog
Linda Kenny Baden, Michael Baden's other wife, claimed
her glory in defending her lover Phil Spector & her pesky attorney client privilege issue.
But it started in Detroit, with Michael Baden's first wife, Judianne.

Dr. Judianne Densen-Gerber Is Dead at 68; Founded Odyssey House Group Drug Program

Dr. Judianne Densen-Gerber, a lawyer and psychiatrist who founded the drug treatment program Odyssey House and went on to give widely quoted but sometimes disputed testimony on subjects like child abuse and pornography, died on Sunday in Manhattan. She was 68.

The cause was cancer, said her daughter Dr. Sarah Baden, who added that her mother lived in Westport, Conn., and had come to New York for Mother's Day.

In 1966, Dr. Densen-Gerber founded Odyssey House, one of the earlier drug-free therapeutic communities that helped addicts recover. She was a leading advocate of such programs, which involved group residence and group therapy, as opposed to methadone-maintenance programs.

She got to know Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller when she picketed in front of his house to demand funds for her program, and they became friends. In the 1970's she became a conspicuous figure at public hearings, society balls and ghetto demonstrations with her bouffant hairdo, rhinestone-studded glasses and cigars.

A 1979 profile in New York magazine quoted Mayor Edward I. Koch as saying that she was ''one of those seminal forces, original, a go-getter.'' He said there were ''few people who can claim as many accomplishments.''

Dr. Densen-Gerber's success at getting government help became her downfall when the state investigated her use of public funds in the early 1980's and found irregularities. She resigned as executive director of Odyssey House in 1983, but remained active in affiliated programs.

Her influence extended to areas like child pornography. In 1977, her testimony that there were 264 monthly publications devoted to the subject helped persuade the House of Representatives to unanimously pass a bill to regulate it.

IPT, the publication of the Institute for Psychological Therapy, reported in 1992 that later government investigations proved her estimates to be exaggerated by ''several orders of magnitude.''

Dr. Densen-Gerber also commented on many other hot issues from a psychiatric point of view.

In 1991, she went to Omaha to testify in court that her interview with a man convinced her he had witnessed four satanic ritual killings. She characterized herself as an expert at deprogramming survivors of satanic cults.

In 1997, she appeared on Geraldo Rivera's television program to analyze a videotape of JonBenet Ramsey in a children's beauty contest.

Her unorthodox approach extended to her psychiatric practice. In 1999, she agreed to pay $200,000 to settle a civil lawsuit over her inability to account for 1,270 vials of medicinal cocaine. She denied any violation of the law.

She was born in Manhattan on Nov. 13, 1934. Her mother, Beatrice Densen, who had kept her own name, was an heiress of the Densen paper-box fortune. Her father, Gustave Gerber, a chemical engineer, became a lawyer in his 40's and was considering studying medicine in his 60's.

Dr. Densen-Gerber's parents persuaded her to study law before supporting her through medical school. She graduated from Columbia Law School and New York University Medical School. She did her residency at Metropolitan Hospital, where during one of her pregnancies, the director suggested she spend an hour or two a day working with addicts. That led to her assembling, in 1966, a group of addicts who wanted to cure themselves without using drugs. Before she found a home for them, they slept in 11 temporary shelters, giving rise to the name Odyssey.

Her original capital was $3.82, and dinner was often rice and spaghetti. Her first permanent building, on East 109th Street, was rented for $17 a month. There were 17 residents.

Within four years, other Odyssey Houses had started to spring up in other cities. In New York, Dr. Densen-Gerber reached out to new populations like prostitutes and addicted mothers.

Her own celebrity grew, and in 1981 The New York Times noted her costume at the April in Paris Ball at the Waldorf-Astoria. She wore a leather lionlike mask and a lionlike coiffure.

By the next year, Dr. Densen-Gerber faced stiff challenges. She agreed to pay back $20,000 in excessive personal expenses to close a state investigation. News reports suggested she had become intoxicated with her own power.

''I remember her grandly lying back and being grande dame to all the peons who were lying around,'' Nancy Hoving, a former member of Odyssey's advisory council, said in a New York magazine interview.

In 1997, her marriage to Michael Baden, who had been the city's medical examiner and a top forensic official for the state police, burned out in a flurry of lawsuits and spectacular accusations.

The marriage's beginning had also been unusual. Mr. Baden said in an interview with The Daily News in 1989 that he took her to an autopsy on their first date and proposed by phone while assisting in the post-mortem on the bullet-riddled body of the mobster Albert Anastasia.

In addition to her daughter Sarah, Dr. Densen-Gerber is survived by another daughter, Trissa Baden of Hopewell, N.J.; a son, Lindsey, of Brookline, Mass.; and two grandchildren.


It always starts with the children because no one cares.

This is a video into the minds of the "Smarty Pants" who believe they are superior.

This is your evolutionary psychology and they have been experimenting with children for a very long time, but no one wants to talk about it.

These people believe in the concept of chattel law where the souls are a legal mechanism called chattel.

These people fear death because they have black souls.

How come "The Poors" cannot freeze themselves?

That sounds like discrimination.

These people are dropping money to freeze their pets, but what about "The Poors"?

 So, if someone from "The Poors" sticks the head of their loved ones in the kitchen freezer, can they claim economic cryogenic discrimination as a legal defense?

 "Freeze my cat or feed "The Poors"?

#Priorities

Some say they lack souls, spirituality or a conscious.

I say they lack a viable brain.

That is why they are freezing their heads in hopes to find a cure.

Pay attention to the people who are so privileged to freeze themselves and the people who get to be used as their lab rats to help them attain immortality.

"The biggest risk factor for mortality is age." 

Yes, these Smarty Pants actually said this.

DUH.

These people say aging is a disease.

Aging is part of life.

If you do not age, then you are dead.

Feel free to provide clarification if I got this wrong.

Check this out.

They are taking about gene therapy using their own genes, while mentioning that their children have genetic disorders.

Gilbert's son has a condition. 

Gilbert has a child welfare NGO trust fund.

Gilbert funds genetic research for a cure for his son.

Gilbert uses children of "The Poors" to test out the cures for his son.

It started in Detroit.

Detroit is #1 in the world for infant mortality and preterm births while just so happening to be #1 in the world for neonatal and perinatal research, and #1 in the world for children's trust funds.

Coincidence?

Nope.

Start with Detroit, or Flint, the major cities with populations of "The Poors" and #coloredrevolution cover up psyoptics, for this is where you shall find your human genetic and psychological experiments with children in the child welfare system.

Yes, the poisoning of Flint was intentional.

I give credit to Chris Lambert for this human plantation crappy predictive human plantation model I shall include in the curriculum of stealin'.

Life Remodeled's one-stop Durfee center adds tenants, nears full occupancy

With three new tenants set to move in this fall, center is up to 27 organizations
Ballmer Group has granted $600,000 in unrestricted funding to support, measure impact
Goal is to take community center model to another Detroit neighborhood in 2021

Brendan Ross
Life Remodeled has repurposed a former school building into a community center, with public use of gym and auditorium spaces and services.
Life Remodeled has made a name for its ability to mobilize 10,000 volunteers each of the past three years for its six-day cleanup of central Detroit.

But its largest impact in the neighborhood could be yet to come.

The nonprofit has secured lease commitments from three new organizations for the repurposed former Detroit Public Schools Community District school building it's converted into a community center, with public use of gym and auditorium spaces and services to help lift people in the neighborhood out of poverty.

Those leases will bring it to 27 business, government and nonprofit service provider tenants in the Durfee Innovation Society center, and depending on final agreements, could bring occupancy up to 89 percent, founder and CEO Chris Lambert said. He's looking to bring the 143,000-square-foot center to full occupancy by year's end.

Last week, Life Remodeled secured a $600,000 unrestricted grant from the Ballmer Group to fund, among other things, measurement of the impact the services offered at the center are having in the community.

"This project is the most important one we'll ever do," Lambert said.

"It's a one-stop shop of opportunity," providing opportunities for children, youth and adults by moving the best and brightest organizations into one building, he said.

"Those organizations are better together just by association and also by proximity and very intentional steps we're going to take to create that ecosystem."

Chris Lambert
Life Remodeled's annual six-day neighborhood cleanup project, which takes place this week, will focus on clearing the blighted alleyways within four square miles of the New Center district.

It's happening while efforts continue to complete renovations at the former Durfee Elementary-Middle School at 2470 Collingwood St., between Linwood Street and Rosa Parks Boulevard.

Life Remodeled is working to raise the last $1.3 million of the $4.8 million budgeted to complete the renovations of the historic building, Lambert said. At the same time, it's continuing to fill out the services offered from the building.

"We're selective on who we let into our building. (Tenants) have to be involved in improving education, in workforce development, entrepreneurism (and) human services," he said.

Three new tenants are expected to move into Durfee this fall:

Metro Detroit Youth Clubs, formerly Boys & Girls Clubs of Oakland & Macomb Counties, will launch its first Wayne County club in September.

JVS Human Services is bringing a Detroit at Work workforce development intake site to the center in October, in partnership with ResCare Workforce Services to provide services including: career coaching, career technical training and job seeking skill workshops.

Methodist Children's Home Society, which launched new child-abuse-prevention and substance-abuse services at the center early this year, plans to expand its space at the center to house new substance abuse, foster care and senior programs it recently took on with its acquisition of Community Social Services of Wayne County.

As opposed to growing on its own, Methodist Children's Home Society saw at Durfee the opportunity to team with like-minded organizations to better serve and strengthen the community, President and CEO Kevin Roach said in an emailed statement.

Durfee "is a perfect fit for this career center considering there are over 30 other human service organizations in the building offering literacy services, career training, family services, youth recreational services, financial education and advocacy," said James Willis, vice president, workforce development and rehabilitation at JVS.

Services at the center now include job mentoring, training and/or placement in areas like coding, marketing, retail, construction and the electrician field, basic social services, behavioral health, business support, literacy programs, foster care and adoption services, senior services and violence prevention programs.


Life Remodeled is working to raise the last $1.3 million of the $4.8 million needed to renovate the former Durfee Elementary-Middle School at 2470 Collingwood St., between Linwood Street and Rosa Parks Boulevard.
Just more than a year ago, U.S. Housing Secretary Ben Carson designated Durfee as the first of a series of "EnVision Centers" or neighborhood service hubs across the country, after backtracking on an earlier announcement that a Boys & Girls Clubs of Southeastern Michigan facility in Detroit would be the first.

The public-private collaborations that make up the federally designated centers are aimed at accelerating economic mobility for low-income households in communities that include HUD-assisted housing.

It's the center's tenants that will drive impact in the neighborhood; Life Remodeled's role is to help them be better together, Lambert said.

With the Ballmer Group funding, the nonprofit hired two of three new employees, bringing it to a staff of 11. It will also use the funding to market the services to youth and adults in the community, coordinate with the Durfee and Central High schools next door and to contract with Gingras Global, a tenant at Durfee, to help it measure the impact of programs, Lambert said. A data collection system and set of dashboards will enable collection and analysis of simple and streamlined information to inform funding, marketing and programming strategies.

"Gingras Global will work with our tenants to assist in specific and intentional data collection which will not only help them grow and open them to new opportunities in terms of partnerships and funding, but also hold them accountable to the outcomes set forth to be accomplished by tenants," he said.

With the tenants and services offered at Durfee, Life Remodeled is looking to:

Make high-quality, effective human services programs available to central Detroit residents
Improve scores for K-8 students across Durfee Elementary-Middle School (now housed in the Central High School building), which scored in the bottom 1 percent of state scores on math and reading last year, Lambert said, to improve education outcomes at Central where 76 percent of students were chronically absent last year

To connect residents and other Detroiters with thousands of sustainable job opportunities each year
To reduce crime in the neighborhood

"When you increase job ... and educational opportunities, crime has no choice but to decrease," Lambert said. "Crime is directly tied to lack of opportunity, joblessness, lower education levels and illiteracy."

The success of any neighborhood efforts will be directly tied to the ability of organizations to hear and put into action the voices of children, youth and adult residents, Lambert said. To that end, nine adult residents from the neighborhood serve on an advisory council to Life Remodeled to provide input and feedback from the community, and a youth advisory council will launch this fall, he said.

Life Remodeled staff will work to foster communication and interaction among Durfee tenants to identify ways to share resources and referrals and collaborate in other ways, Lambert said.

Rooting programs and services aimed at helping lift people out of poverty in the community is something the Ballmer Group supports, Executive Director Kylee Mitchell Wells said in an email.

"The Durfee Innovation Society is an example of public, private and philanthropic partners working together to fill a gap in the community by offering a variety of resources that have a dynamic approach for helping kids and their families increase their chances of economic mobility," Mitchell said.

Corporate support for Life Remodeled's operations has grown by leaps and bounds since it launched Durfee center, Lambert said, with newly awarded grants of $50,000 or more from companies including BASF SE, L&L Products, Masco Corp., Sun Communities and White Pine Investment Co.

More than 160 companies have contributed $1,000 or more this year, he said. Life Remodeled is operating on a cash budget of just more than $3 million and an in-kind, donated goods and services budget of $2.2 million.

The continued support in its work "gives us confidence that we can and will eventually multiply this model throughout the city of Detroit, with the hope of expanding to additional large U.S. cities over the next 10 years," Lambert said.

Life Remodeled plans to begin work in another Detroit neighborhood in the fall of 2021, he said. It will continue to run the Durfee Innovation Society for the full 50 years of the lease but move to another Detroit neighborhood at that point to create another one-stop service center and also do annual neighborhood cleanups and blight removal, Lambert said.

It will look for a neighborhood with high levels of crime and blight, academic challenges and workforce shortages, he said. And it will look for another building that's embedded in the community and walkable, like a school building, he said.

Currently, Life Remodeled is considering the Brightmoor, Jefferson-Chalmers and lower east side neighborhoods, Lambert said.

Penelope prepares for the return of Odysseus.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

2 comments:

BEVERLY TRAN said...

Heads up. The new targeted chattel population are "The Border Jumpers" (my new term). Covenant House is racing to make new human asset management plantations on the second floor of their COGIC school properties to run that Medicaid game to pay Weingartz.

BEVERLY TRAN said...

Will be posting more of my snitch updates on twat.