- Line dry
- Warm iron
- Do not iron
- Do not use bleach
- Do not use chlorine bleach
- Dry clean only
- Cold water wash only
- Machine wash, cold water
- Hand wash separately
- Machine wash separately
- Only non-chlorine bleach when needed
CLOTHING CONTROL
CONNECTION
PAGE 5 0F 11
Here it is. Laundering directions on garment labels dictate fabric care to the unsuspecting public, that's YOU. THEY are confident that you'll be a good SHEEP>
and unquestioningly follow directions. Most of you do --- SHAME ON YOU! Before I
tell you WHY you should NOT follow those directions - drum roll for suspense, maestro, please - just remember who OWNS the fabric manufacturing concerns,
the chemical companies that make synthetics, the oil companies who supply the
raw materials, the ones who own the cotton fields, and apparently most of the conglomerates of clothing designers, clothing manufacturers, and retail outlets.
It is none other than --- THE OLYMPIANS and their bedfellows. 'Nuff said?
Prepare yourself for a weird one, here. BUTTONS. That's right - buttons. Take a look through your wardrobe, and see if you have any shirts or blouses that have buttons with white backsides.
They will look like they are sandwiched together, or laminated. Take a really GOOD look at the
backs of those buttons.
If the garment is fairly new, the backs may still be pure white, but if you've had it awhile, they won't be. The front part of the button is usually off-white or white - it may be another color - the backs will be white. [Because so many of the dark dyes in fabric are already carrying an "electrostatic charge", for lack of a more accurate term, I did not find as many buttons of this type on dark clothing. Usually, they are found on white and light clothes.] If the garment has been through the washing machine a few times - often, just once - the BACK SIDES OF THE BUTTONS WILL HAVE BLOTCHES OF COLOR ON THEM - usually red, green, or blue - guaranteed. Now, why would THAT be?
Well, I know why, but you would not believe it. Suffice it to say, that as soon as there are enough "blotches" to cover the backs of the buttons almost completely - the garment loses its desirability. It looks like a sorry excuse for the shirt, blouse, dress - whatever it once was, and it is consigned to Goodwill, the Salvation Army, or the trash.
I have changed the buttons on several of my shirts, from new ones, to old, natural material buttons, or even old plastic buttons, to see how it would affect that article of clothing. To my surprise, and satisfaction - the garment wore like iron. Well, "sort of" - iron is very uncomfortable
to wear. IT WORKED! No "colors" appeared on the new buttons - ever! Even if the original garment was loaded with heavy synthetic stitching, it wore well, and the buttons stayed the color they
were. So, ONE CONTROL - eliminated.
Here's some FOOD FOR THOUGHT, which I will elaborate on later --- what is the deal with all
of the nylon stitching in cotton clothing, ANYWAY?
Do the people who stitch the clothing know what is going on? Of course not. Do most of the garment manufacturers REALLY know what's afoot? Probably not. Do the folks who own the concerns who make the buttons and thread and fabric know? YOU BET, THEY DO.
Aren't garments made to LAST? ARE YOU KIDDING? Positively NOT! They are designed, like most consumer goods, to wear out after a certain amount of laundering and wear, so you will have to
spend more $$$, replacing them. It is called "PLANNED OBSOLESCENCE" - very effective method -
good plan. Works on TV's, cars, radios, blenders, garbage disposal units, hair dryers, refrigerators, washers, dryers, telephones, computers - and almost anything else man makes. GOODS THAT LAST FOR GENERATIONS DON'T GENERATE INCOME FOR THE PLANNERS, now do they?
Years ago, people wore their handmade clothing for years and years, and passed it down to subsequent generations. No longer. Today, you're fortunate if clothing lasts 5 years, let alone a lifetime. It's even ALMOST IMPOSSIBLE to purchase high-quality fabric, if you DO sew. Ask any seamstress, at least here in the States. They'll tell you. Most of the material available today is very cheaply made, poorly dyed, and almost ALL synthetics or blends. I even found one large fabric store that didn't have one spool of 100% cotton thread IN IT. They also did not have any GENUINE RUBBER ELASTIC, except for use in maternity panels, NO wool, NO silk, NO real suede, and VERY poor quality cotton terry cloth. Home sewing is rapidly becoming a lost art - LET'S REVIVE IT.
One well-made quality garment is well worth the effort it will take to find the natural materials to make it. It will be well worth the time it takes to make it, you'll have YEARS of enjoyment out of it, and it will contain NO CONTROLS!
A few years back, I was fortunate enough to purchase a pair of men's overalls, that were 45 years old. They had been stored in a basement, with several other pairs, and had
NEVER been worn. I laundered them, and they came out beautifully wearable. It is not necessarily the AGE of the garment- it is the weakening and/or loss of the CONTROLS,
that make it appear to be unwearable.
More evidence - almost all of you probably own a COTTON shirt, blouse, dress, skirt, or pair of pants that has a label declaring one or several of the following:
Friends, brethren, and countrymen - LEND ME YOUR EARS! WHY ON EARTH SHOULD YOU OR WOULD YOU OBEY THOSE INSTRUCTIONS? The garments are COTTON! If it is 100% COTTON, you certainly don't need to follow those instructions. Believe it or not, MANY of the pure white cotton shirts have labels on them that state "dry clean only". EXCUSE ME - SAY THAT AGAIN? Dry clean COTTON????? Whatever FOR? AMAZING!
What is further astonishing, is that YOU ALL DO IT! I have seen more beautiful all-but-new cotton shirts, at second-hand shops, thrift stores, and other places that sell used clothing, with
DRY CLEANER'S TAGS still attached. Some of that, I know, is because we are all so busy. No time
to wash and dry and iron --- THAT, I can understand. But I talk to people all of the time, and they
tell me that they just follow the instructions on the label!
Isn't ANYONE using that incredible organ between your ears called a BRAIN, anymore? Cottons
get sparkling white with chlorine bleach, as they do with the bleaching action of the sun. Years ago, our grandmothers spread their whites on bushes and shrubs, to be bleached by the SUN. For many, many years, we have bleached our cottons with chlorine bleach. Not so good for the skin, but it
does a fantastic job on the cotton.
WELL, ARE YOU READY FOR A REVELATION? There is a very specific reason WHY you are being wholesaledly instructed to use cold or warm water only, warm iron or none, and NO CHLORINE BLEACH, and it has nothing to do with fabric care.
YOU ARE NOT GOING TO LIKE THE REASON.
I can only hope that it ANGERS you, as it does me.
THE REASON you are being told NOT to use a hot iron, which we have always used for cottons, and NOT to use chlorine bleach, which we have used for many years on our whites, and NOT to dry
the garment at high heat, is because:
IT WEAKENS NYLON - drastically and irreparably.
WEAKENED NYLON = WEAKENED CONTROL.
WEAKENED CONTROL = THINKING POPULACE
THINKING POPULACE = AWARE, ANGRY PEOPLE
Aware, angry people who then start to take control over their own lives and affairs; aware, angry people are not nearly as susceptible or tuned in to the subliminals, the ELFs or VLFISs. (Extra Low Frequency radio waves, and Very Low Frequency Infrasound waves.) Talk about some "CONTROL FREAKS"! THE ILLUMINATI, and their HIDDEN MASTERS who CONTROL THEM, are completely insane. But, they have NOT reckoned with God showing us the way of escape. Well, Hallelujah, He has!
If you thoroughly explore the site, which - I wrote as a book, you'll find THE WAY OF ESCAPE.
It bears repeating:
"KNOWLEDGE REJECTED IS
A FEARSOME MASTER."
This page was last updated: October 28, 2022
subtly, secretly, silently, successfully...
The opinions expressed here are purely mine. Any references to real people are purely --- INTENTIONAL.
Og Nito © All Rights Reserved
"Wise Men STILL Seek Him"