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bdiminishedminor7 ago

Mice like cheese. Squirrels like walnuts. They build underground storage rooms to collect the cheese and the nuts they find. Podesta's nickname is "Skippy", another famous squirrel.

Can't help but think of that creepy children's book, "The Secret Pizza Party", by Daniel Salmieri & Adam Rubin. They also wrote a series of stories called "Those Darn Squirrels", and a book called "Dragons Love Tacos". Their books are filled to the brim with mice, squirrels, masked rodents and, of course, pizza's, ice-cream, taco's etc. etc.

Daniel Salmieri also illustrated a book called "The Dullards", about boring parents who won't allow their kids to join ... the circus. Lots of circus imagery in this book, and, again, lots of furry animals. Also a swirly blue/pink ball.

And every book they write seems to be about boring parents, keeping their kids away from secret places of joy and fun. Every book seems to convey the message that it is OK to disobey your parents, visit the fun places anyway, and that it is OK to keep this happy secret to yourself.

Their latest book is called "Robo-Sauce". Here's a short synopsis:

Parents need to know that Robo-Sauce, by Adam Rubin and Daniel Salmieri, the team behind Dragons Love Tacos, is the zany story of a boy who wants to be a robot, so he drinks a secret "robo-sauce" (the unseen narrator gives him the fictional secret formula for it), and all heck breaks loose. "Robo-Kid" activates a robo-rocket blast, a robo-laser blast, and a robo-tornado and rampages through town. All leads to robo-domination, and kids have to turn the book upside down to read the final pages of the "Robo-Book." It's crazy, silly fun. Parents may need to help younger kids fold the pages properly to create the Robo-Book (there are diagrams).

Monkstar1 ago

I have Dragons Love Tacos and read through the book many times trying to find anything .... interesting. There's no pedo imagery and the story isn't as 'interesting' as some of their other books. I can see how the other stories raise concerns but Dragons Love Tacos just doesn't have much to stand on IMO.

Cara_C ago

I don't know. Dragons are large reptiles and the satanists seem to believe the elites are reptilians in human form. According to some slang definitions posted at UrbanDictionary, taco can be slang for vagina, salsa can be slang for a woman's period or engaging in oral sex with a woman while she's having her period (we know the satanists have a thing for bodily fluids and menstrual blood is right up there), and hot sauce can mean fresh semen infected with HIV/AIDS. If the author is a satanist or pedophile using any of these alternate definitions, the coded meaning could be extremely inappropriate for children.

Also, as many of us have recently learned, satanist pedophiles use code language, symbolism, imagery, numbers, and gestures that normal people aren't familiar with. They hide in plain sight and apparently believe this enhances their powers. We might be looking right at their subversive material and not recognize it. However, as we learn more about it, they are exposed.

Monkstar1 ago

Okay, let's go along with that. First off, dragons aren't 'real' so saying they're reptiles....eh, I'll allow it I guess. The story goes dragons can't eat spicy salsa because it gives them tummy troubles. How would you relate that. The boy in the book has a taco party (nefarious) and he accidentally serves them salsa, which then causes them to spit fire and burn his house down. Then they build him another house. What would be the connection there? Not disagreeing with you, just putting it out there.