🚨 BOMBSHELL! Brave Alex Jones threatens to call for Donald Trump's impeachment if he passes Section 224, completely surrendering US military intelligence to the Zionist regime.
He confirms Netanyahu is manipulating the White House, calling this massive betrayal total treason!
Grok:
Here is the current Board of Directors of RELX plc (the parent company of Elsevier), listed with their nationalities, as confirmed directly from the company’s official corporate governance page (current as of June 2026).
The Board has 10 members: 2 Executive Directors, the Non-Executive Chair, and 7 Independent Non-Executive Directors. All non-executive directors (including the Chair) are considered independent.Executive DirectorsErik Engstrom – Chief Executive Officer; Nationality: Swedish
Nick Luff – Chief Financial Officer; Nationality: British
Non-Executive Directors (Chair + Independent)Paul Walker – Chair of the Board; Nationality: British
Suzanne Wood – Non-Executive Director; Independent, Senior Independent Director; Nationality: American
Alistair Cox – Non-Executive Director; Independent; Nationality: British
June Felix – Non-Executive Director; Independent; Nationality: American
Andy Halford – Non-Executive Director; Independent; Nationality: British
Charlotte Hogg – Non-Executive Director; Independent; Nationality: British, American and Irish
Andrew Sukawaty – Non-Executive Director; Independent; Nationality: American
Bianca Tetteroo – Non-Executive Director; Independent, Workforce Engagement Director; Nationality: Dutch
Vaccines are so terrible that academic journals cheat and break their own rules in order to censor the most important data. It's an astonishing admission of guilt by the mainstream scientific community.
Wolves rest their heads on one another to strengthen social bonds
Researchers believe this behavior helps reinforce trust, affection and cooperation within the pack. It is especially common between closely bonded wolves and mated pairs
Anne Sullivan was only fourteen years old when her mother died of tuberculosis. Not long after, her father could not cope with his grief.
He turned to alcohol and abandoned his children. Anne and her little brother, Jimmie, were sent away to the Tewksbury Almshouse in Massachusetts.
It was 1880, and this place was not a hospital or a school. It was a dark, dirty institution where society locked away the people it wanted to forget. The corridors crawled with rats, and the air smelled of sickness. Anne was nearly blind because of a painful eye infection called trachoma. The hardest blow came when Jimmie became very sick and died right beside her, leaving Anne completely alone in the world.
Anne slept on an iron bed while rodents ran beneath her blanket. She had no education, no manners, and no future. A relative once brutally remarked that a farm animal had better manners than her. Yet, a fierce hunger burned inside her. She refused to let the darkness win.
When state inspectors arrived to check the building, Anne knew it was her only shot at survival. She chased the group through the dirty hallways and threw herself in front of the powerful inspector, Franklin B. Sanborn. Her body was shaking, but her voice stayed strong.
"Mr. Sanborn, I want to go to school," she said. Those few words changed history forever. Impressed by her raw determination, he said yes.
In October 1880, Anne entered the Perkins School for the Blind. She was an outsider and far behind the other students, but she studied with total desperation. Operations partially restored her sight, and her mind absorbed everything. By 1886, the girl from the poorhouse graduated as the top student of her class.
Soon after, a wealthy man from Alabama named Arthur Keller contacted the school. He needed help for his young daughter, Helen, who had been left deaf and blind by an illness. Helen was trapped in a silent, dark world, and she expressed her frustration through violent, uncontrollable tantrums. The school sent their best graduate, and Anne arrived in Alabama in March 1887.
Anne recognized the anger in the young girl because she had felt that same trapped sensation herself. Every day, Anne spelled letters into Helen's palm using a manual alphabet. Helen copied the movements, but she did not understand that the gestures meant real objects. She grew frustrated and fought back.
The breakthrough happened by the garden pump. Anne placed Helen's hand under the gushing cold water. On Helen's other hand, she repeatedly spelled the letters w-a-t-e-r. Suddenly, Helen dropped her pitcher. A look of pure understanding washed over her face, and she spelled the word back.
Helen then ran around the yard, touching everything, demanding to know their names. The world had finally opened up for her. Before the day ended, Helen turned to Anne and asked who she was. Anne spelled out a single word: Teacher.
They remained together for forty-nine years. Anne helped Helen become the first deaf-blind person to earn a college degree, translating lectures directly into her palm. When Anne passed away in 1936, Helen held her hand until the very end, still calling her by that beautiful name.
Anne proved that no matter how deep the darkness, a single spark of devotion can light up the entire world.
The real threat is synthetic proteins - like the modified Spike Protein of RatG13. The only reason these techdicks want increased security is so that they can control the technology and use it against us. The modern equivalent of trying to end the 2nd amendment.