The Cloward-Piven strategy of overwhelming the system is in full swing. Chaos driven by communists, socialists, globalists, anarchists, and Islamists working together has already engulfed Europe. God HELP US if the radicals complete their plans for America this November...
Interesting.
What They AvoidChickens have sharp instincts and generally refuse to eat bugs that use odor, bright colors, or toxins to defend themselves. They usually avoid:Beneficial but foul-tasting bugs: Multicolored Asian ladybeetles and box-elder bugs emit a noxious odor that chickens dislike.Stinging insects: Bees and wasps are generally left alone.Warning-colored insects: Caterpillars with distinct, warning color patterns (like bright orange and black stripes) are often ignored.
Grok
Bottom line: The auditor was almost certainly within his rights. These encounters often escalate because officers (and complainants) overestimate what constitutes a violation. Without more context showing actual reasonable suspicion of a specific crime, refusing ID wasn't illegal—and any arrest for it alone would likely be challenged successfully. Outcomes vary by exact state law and facts, but the core activity (public filming + ID refusal absent RS) is protected.
+9 Public schools in Riverdale, Illinois, generally score below state averages on standardized tests. Local elementary schools earn GreatSchools ratings ranging from 3 to 6 out of 10, with test scores and student progress frequently falling somewhat below expectations.
In 2022, at 31 weeks pregnant, Fiona Hooker’s body suddenly became allergic to her own baby.
She noticed a few tiny itchy marks around her belly button that felt like nettle stings.
Within weeks her entire body had erupted in blisters. Her immune system had decided her own baby was the enemy.
By 35 weeks she took herself to the hospital because she couldn't bear it. They gave her four days of oral steroids which helped calm it down.
But two days before she was due to give birth it became unbearable again, and 24 hours after giving birth it exploded into blisters.
She was diagnosed with Pemphigoid Gestationis, a rare autoimmune condition affecting one in 50,000 pregnancies.
Doctors believe a gene in her son Barney's DNA from his father triggered her immune system to attack a placental protein that is also found in skin, so her body was essentially attacking itself.
The pain was so severe she couldn't hold Barney without agony. "It hurt a lot to even hold my son so I wasn't really able to enjoy the newborn stage because of it," she said.
By Christmas she had weaned herself off the steroids, though the condition could flare again with each menstrual cycle, future pregnancy, or hormonal change for the rest of her life.
She had not experienced it during her first pregnancy, because her daughter carries different genes.