@City_Xtra@Laporte Peak baller! Happy birthday kid, we will always treasure your time with us. May the rest of your footie career be filled with good moments & trophies.
Earlier this morning… at 9:49am ET, the Department of War posted this, and said — “PATRIOTS IN CONTROL.”
Q#949 - “FULL CONTROL”
In fact, “Patriots in Control” is littered throughout the Q drops consistently. They know this. We know this.
Long ago, anons were taught that timestamps have meaning, and we started understanding quickly that the Q Mil operation was about telling the public what was happening in ways that did not violate National Security.
And here we are again…
Plausible deniability that in which instantly signals to anons, we hear you and we got this. Stay calm.
Only anons can understand this.
These are Messages of assurance and faith.
5:5 loud and clear.
Thank you for the message DoW 🫡
Nothing to see here.
Just Trump posting stuff from the Q drops on his social media.
I’ve certainly noticed far fewer Q bashers lately.
Everything is coming full circle.
Observe the top three things DNI Gabbard is investigating:
-Treasonous conspiracy against Trump
-Election integrity, specifically mail-in ballots from Fulton County in 2020
-Covid origins and US biolabs, specifically the 40+ in Ukraine
All of these are connected.
How? Covid was a man-made virus, that was created with US taxpayer dollars via CIA/USAID Project PREDICT, and it’s release led to mass mail-in ballots in the 2020 election, which the Dems used to steal the election and overthrow Trump.
Covid was the next phase of the treasonous coup to remove Trump, after the Mueller investigation and impeachment attempts failed. Covid was a tool used by the Deep State to create the conditions for them to steal the election. It’s all part of the same plot.
Tulsi is telling us what she is doing with her actions. The entire case is being built, and they know exactly where the trail ends.
It’s happening.
(ABC clip from 01/28/2026)
Cole Allen is the Dunning-Kruger Assassin.
Allen is not some random nut job from the fringes of society. He’s a very articulate graduate of Caltech, which means he has a high degree of native intelligence. He’s in the education profession. He is on BlueSky. He goes to No Kings protests. He’s your basic rank-and-file Democrat.
But it’s that high native intellect that led him astray.
The Dunning-Kruger Effect is, at its simplest level, people thinking they know more that they do. People who are high achievers in one area often mistakenly believe their native abilities make them experts in all areas.
So you get a super-smart guy like Allen, he excels in one narrow area, and extrapolates that excellence into thinking he knows more than he does in other areas. He goes into Blue Sky, he goes to No Kings protests, and he is easily swayed into believing all of the insane, violent lies those sorts of intellectual cesspools foster. All of a sudden this computer science expert is a national political policy expert too, except that latter expertise is derived from insane propaganda. The man with the intellectual skill to write code is not smart enough to recognize when he himself has fallen prey to propaganda, so he KNOWS that Donald Trump is Hitler and must be stopped.
And when you KNOW that someone is Hitler, what’s the right thing to do?
That’s what is so scary at this very moment—the sheer number of ostensibly educated Democrats who KNOW so many things are “true" that are actually so very, very untrue.
In many ways, Cole Allen is just an average Democrat, and like most average Democrats, he fell prey to credentialism and Dunning-Kruger. But Cole took it to the next level; let’s pray more do not.
@CitizenScoopX@CyrilRamaphosa@MYANC It's kickbacks disguised as loans. You can't tell the world "we're paying RSA leaders to enact suicidal racist social policies" but you can say "we're borrowing RSA money for urban renewal".
So the bribes they pay corrupt RSA leaders, gets paid back by the people. Bunch of...
Bita Hemmati
Ghazal Ghalandari
Golnaz Naraghi
Venus Hossein Nejad
Panah Movahedi
Ensieh Nejati
Mahboubeh Shabani
Diana Taher Abadi
All set to be executed by hanging unless there is an intervention.
@pookiepolls It damn well bothers me. It bothers me a great deal. Manufacturers cutting corners to increase their bottom line at the expense of public health, is more widespread than consumers will believe. 😡😠
@ItumelengMocum1@pookiepolls You are a perfect peasant for the retards, fraudsters & thieves in charge of South Africa today.
32yrs of the ANC ruining RSA, highest crime rates in the world, increased poverty, crappy education & all we have left are angry & ignorant people like you. How sad.
A whole generation of South Africans would be shocked to read this, especially when they look at where the country is today.
Before 1994, South Africa built capabilities that few countries in the world could claim.
It developed nuclear weapons, a rocket programme, large-scale synthetic fuel production, a globally respected defence industry, and medical breakthroughs that made world history. At the southern tip of Africa, one country achieved all of this before the Cold War had even ended.
Today, Africa is often spoken about as if it is still waiting to industrialise, still dependent, still trying to build what others already mastered long ago. That is what makes this history so striking.
While South Africa was enriching uranium at Pelindaba, testing rockets at Overberg, producing fuel from coal at Secunda, and carrying out the world’s first human heart transplant at Groote Schuur, much of the rest of Africa was being pulled in a very different direction. Instead of industrial self-reliance, many newly independent states were sold ideology. Instead of building durable technical capacity, they were pushed toward socialist models that too often ended in weak institutions, dependency, and collapse. The pattern repeated itself across the continent.
South Africa, by contrast, built real strategic capability under sanctions and international pressure. It developed its own uranium enrichment process, built six nuclear weapons, and then voluntarily dismantled them before the democratic transition, opening its programme to international inspection. No other nuclear state has done that in the same way.
It also built a serious rocket programme. Vehicles in the RSA series were designed and tested, and the country came close to having its own orbital launch capability. That programme was not simply paused. It was dismantled.
Sasol achieved something equally remarkable: turning coal into fuel on a huge scale. When South Africa could not secure enough oil, it used chemistry and engineering to produce its own supply. That was not theory. It was functioning industrial independence.
The defence sector was another pillar of that capability. South Africa designed and produced advanced artillery, armoured vehicles, aircraft projects, and attack helicopters. Some of these systems went on to influence military designs far beyond its borders.
Then there was medicine. In 1967, Christiaan Barnard and his team performed the world’s first successful human heart transplant in Cape Town. That was not an isolated achievement. It reflected a wider culture of scientific and medical excellence.
So the uncomfortable question is this: if all of this is documented, why is so little of it widely remembered?
The answer may be that it does not fit neatly into the version of history most people are taught. Pre-1994 South Africa is rightly remembered for apartheid and injustice, but that is not the whole story. It was also the most technologically advanced state Africa had produced, and acknowledging that forces people to confront how much capability existed, and how much has since been lost.
South Africa did not inherit these achievements. It built them under pressure, under sanctions, and largely on its own. That is not nostalgia. It is history. And the fact that so many people barely know it happened says a great deal about how history is told.
Government wants R100 billion from South African businesses, with no accountability for where it goes.
The proposed BEE Transformation Fund would force companies to hand 3% of after-tax profit to a state-run fund. Procurement targets would make it effectively impossible to buy from suppliers who don't meet strict ownership requirements. Good businesses will lose contracts. Investment will leave. Jobs will not be created.
Gerhard Papenfus, Chief Executive of NEASA, breaks it all down in the latest episode of The Employers’ Voice.
Watch the full episode here to find out what this means for your business:
https://t.co/Yv4DQnMp17
They ate newborns.
They raped Kids.
He bought sulphuric acid in HUGE Amounts (its known for dissolving bones.)
They buried victims (childrens) Under a golf course.
They practice satanic rituals.
Still we're not angry enough and
Still we let them control US...
FOLLOW ME, THE NEXT DROP WILL BE SHOCKING
@NkululekoMhlaba If it’s done with laws that factors race, it’s a race-based laws.
A race-based law is racist by definition.
Calling it redress or transformation or lawful discrimination or whatever new term will be coined tomorrow won’t change the fact that it is, fundamentally, racist.
Release the sex offenders' list now
South Africa has a National Register for Sex Offenders. On paper, it is meant to protect the vulnerable. In practice, it operates behind closed doors. Ordinary citizens cannot access it. Parents cannot check it. Communities cannot use it to make informed decisions about who works with their children.
Who is this government trying to protect?
And whose names sit on that register, names some would rather keep hidden?
The time has come to make this register public. Until that happens, a troubling question will remain: whether the state is safeguarding the vulnerable, or shielding offenders at their expense.
I spent ten years immersed in the horrific world of child sex abuse. The victims spoke of being betrayed by people who are supposed to love and care for them; now they are being betrayed once again by the South African government.
@DOJCD_ZA@ThuliMadonsela3@PublicProtector@mmkubayi