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WOOL
A WORD TO THE WISE

 CLOTHING CONTROL 
CONNECTION 
PAGE 9 0F 11

    

CONTROL INCOGNITO
​     Well, are you beginning to get the drift about natural fibers? They all have SO MANY EXCELLENT qualities and properties. They are good for your body, good for your health, good for the economy.
Synthetics, by and large, are manufactured from petroleum products - petroleum comes from the oil industry, and the oil industry is CONTROLLED by THE OLYMPIANS.

     Polyester, nylon, dacron, acrylic, spandex, among others, are PETROLEUM-BASED synthetics. Now, who stands to benefit from their extensive production and manufacture? Well, FOLLOW THE MONEY! Who owns LOTS of interest in the oil industry? 

     THE ILLUMINATITHE OLYMPIANSTHE CONTROLLERS, call them what you will - the "POWERS THAT BE" own the OIL INDUSTRY!

     Isn't that nice? They own or completely control the banking industry, transportation, major food conglomerates, the oil concerns, the pharmaceutical companies, and, they THINK they own - US!  WRONG ! On to more about natural fibers...
     WOOL is one of the very best natural fibers for clothing construction, due to its extraordinary properties. Most of the properties of WOOL that we are citing, are for sheep's WOOL. There are 
many other animals that provide us with WOOL. One inch of WOOL fiber can contain up to 20,000 overlapping "shingles" made of keratin, the same protein found in hair, fingernails, toenails, feathers, and animal horns. All of the shingles, or scales found in WOOL fibers, point to the same direction.  When heat and moisture are applied to WOOL fibers, under pressure, it compresses into felt.

     WOOL is an insulator par excellence, due to the air that becomes trapped between the scales. With very little weight, WOOL provides great warmth and even feels warm to the touch. The surface of WOOL fabric is naturally water resistant - its interior is incredibly absorbent. Of all natural fibers, WOOL is the most hydrophilic, (not hydroliphichydrophilic) as it can absorb up to 30% of its own weight without feeling wet. COTTON only absorbs about 8%, and as a rule, synthetics absorb less than 5%. WOOL is porous and permeable, absorbing massive amounts of perspiration, and releasing it slowly through evaporation - so one feels less chilled in bitter winter weather, and comfortably cool in summer's heat.

     Water swells WOOL fibers, making the fabric bulkier, decreasing air permeability, and lowering the wind-chill factor effect. One NEAT thing about WOOL, is that it absorbs moisture from the air, as its fibers liberate heat - a characteristic that scientists have been attempting to duplicate in synthetics. One single gram of WOOL gives off 27 calories of heat when it goes from dry to wet - or 
is it wet to dry? - I can never remember. When you are wearing it in the rain or snow, WOOL takes 
a LONG time to actually get wet.

     WOOL is naturally flame resistant, and requires a higher temperature to ignite than other natural fibers. THAT would be the ideal material to choose for infants' sleepwear - but, NO, instead we get synthetics, that MELT to the child as they burn. Using a WOOL blanket is an excellent way to smother a fire. WOOL yarns are springy and lustrous, have good elastic recovery, and do not wrinkle when laundered. AS LONG AS YOU DO NOT RUN THEM THROUGH THE WASHER WITH HOT WATER, AND THE DRYER ON HIGH HEAT! There ARE some WOOL garments made that have been pre-shrunk, but most - are not.

     The inate resiliency in WOOL is the reason that an official baseball contains 150 yards of it - or USED to - and why WOOL is used to cover piano hammers. In many hospitals, premature infants and long-term patients ( is there such a thing anymore?) are cushioned on WOOL pile or sheepskins, without fear of bedsores. WOOL fibers can be bent roughly 20,000 times without breaking - SILK breaks after about 1,800 bends, and RAYON after about 75 or so. Due to its high crimpage, it absorbs odors and noise effectively in heavy machinery and stereo speakers. Felting of WOOL compacts it, making it less permeable, warmer, sturdier, more water-resistant, and able to be used for winter boots, pen tips, and polishing wheels. There IS no adequate synthetic replacement, but - just TRY to find 100% WOOL fabric in a fabric store nowadays. Good luck.

     Most of what is cited here, pertains to sheep's WOOL, but WOOL can be from llamas, alpacas, angora rabbits, and goats, to name some other sources. One thing that is LOVELY about WOOL from other animals - it can be laundered quite easily, and it appears to create less allergic reactions for 
the wearers. Many people who cannot wear garments made with sheep's wool, CAN wear the others.
     THE PLANNERS know all of these things about natural fibers, and how beneficial they are for 
the human body - that's why they manufacture so much in the way of synthetics and blends. It is cheap to manufacture, just as expensive to the consumer, utilizes their oil, and connects you once again, to their CONTROLS. NEVER UNDERESTIMATE THE PLANS BEHIND THEIR SCHEMING, NOR THE REASONS FOR THEM. Pure, natural fabrics help to give your body protection from their subliminal messages, and also afford great protection from the previously mentioned ELFs and VLFIS. They KNOW it, and hence strive to provide us with only THEIR carefully engineered products.  So, even though the suit or skirt or pants that you own MAY be primarily constructed of wool, silk, cotton, linen, or bamboo --- the lining will be SYNTHETIC, the stitching will be SYNTHETIC, and the labels 
will be SYNTHETIC.  Believe you me --- THEY know EXACTLY what THEY are about.

     A word to the wise, and I hope that by now, you ARE - just because the label says 100% natural "whatever", it may very well not be. Here are a few ways to tell --- remember the BURN TEST? I'll 
get a bit more specific...you can unravel and test an inside seam area of your garment. Get down to the individual fibers.  Stand by with match in hand, and test away.

     COTTON as I told you, burns slowly, steadily, readily, and leaves all but no ash. LINEN burns readily, also, and likewise - hardly ANY ash. WOOL burns more slowly than the other two, and leaves 
a "bead" at the end, while giving off an odor that is reminiscent of burnt hair or feathers. SILK burns quickly - pure SILK burns with a bead at the end like WOOL, while "weighted silk" burns to an ash which keeps the shape of the original yarn.

     If the fiber that you're testing is a blend - it will ALWAYS burn with a distinctive "burn-spurt", "burn-spurt", "burn-spurt" fingerprint. There are still tailors in New York City who test garments for blends. Actually, the correct title for them is "inspectors". They are specialists, and highly technically trained to differentiate between pure fabrics made of WOOL, and blends.

     The blends are called "shatnes", a non-kosher blend made usually of WOOL and LINEN, and orthodox Jews are forbidden under the Mosaic Law, from wearing any garment that is made with "shatnes". These inspectors work in laboratories, and each garment that successfully passes their exacting scrutiny gets a "non-shatnes" label, after being tested in 8-40 different places for purity. 
Lest you think that this is insanity - these inspectors make their living testing fibers, fabrics, and garments, and they KNOW that LABELS LIE! SOME people still take the Word of God seriously.

     ATTENTION! I am not suggesting that you become so obsessed with fabric content that you test your clothing in 8-40 places. I want you to know that there is a specific reason we should be wearing 100% pure, natural fibers, as a rule.
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.
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