This is the Baal worship. He has many names... Molech too. When you see kids disappearing every day, this is what is happening. They like innocent blood.
They are here in Kenya. They purchased some 500 acres in Solai. The Ashkenazi Kazarians.
They own the epstein class
See what exactly happened in the epstein island.
The breeding zorro ranch too
Your fingerprints can be lifted from photos. Here's what to actually do about it.
1. Be mindful of hand photos. high-resolution photos of your fingertips at close range are the risk. a normal selfie or group photo is not. The concern is clear: close shots of your fingers, peace signs, hands holding items, and typing shots.
2. Don't rely on fingerprint authentication alone for high-stakes accounts. Use a strong PIN or password as your primary unlock method. fingerprint as convenience, not as your only lock.
3. Use a passkey or hardware security key for your most sensitive accounts. These cannot be spoofed from a photo.
4. For banking apps: enable a secondary PIN in addition to biometric. Most banking apps support this. Use it.
5. Know your threat model. For most people, a spoofed fingerprint attack requires physical access to your device afterward. The photo gets the print. The attacker still needs to be holding your phone. If you're not a high-value target, your risk is low.
If you are a high-value target:
Disable fingerprint authentication entirely on your most sensitive devices. Use a long alphanumeric PIN. Assume any high-resolution photo of your hands is a liability.
Your fingerprint is the one password you can never change.
treat it accordingly.
@shelbyruthellis Yes on every point. Unfortunately we learn the hard way. Fortunately, we then share the knowledge so that we save someone else the heartache. You have earned a new follower
The race for; iridium, gallium, tantalum, beryllium, germanium, coltan, lithium, uranium, titanium, niobium, gold, manganese, tungsten, nickel, rubies, oil and gas, will be either what wakes up Kenyans, or finally breaks our fatherland.
We are a few steps away from being a superpower or being a failed state.
The current crop of leaders cannot usher in a golden age for our sacres land.
So I ask, to what end shall we be herded into poverty, enslavement to imperialism, indebted to international banking cartels and a dark future?
We have never known true sovereignty.
Our republic is still a colony of the British Crown.
Laikipia for example, even though it's endowed with trillions of dollars worth of precious metals, is owned by English lords, and registered in the United Kingdom- Laikipia Limited.
Our mineral wealth is also owned by the Crown, via World Bank.
Not a single gram of rare earths is touched without permission from The City of London.
Cue, Jacob Juma, he 'discovered' Niobium worth $300B in Mrima Hill, Kwale County, but only disclosed a third of the mineral wealth, $100B.
Why?
Because the two-thirds remainder would be owned by British/Scottish mining companies Cortec Mining Co and Stirling.
He was murdered by Kenya's excellent thugs; all of them not just PRESIDENT EBOLA.
In Turkana they discovered oil worth about $44B in Ngamia 1.
Then they did extra radar scans around Lodwar and discovered;
1. A fresh water aquiffer that had enough water to be supplied to all Kenyans, non-stop for 70 years.
It'd support irrigation and household utility and usher an agricultural boom.
Then an organization called the IDLO was involved and within 48hrs, Kenya's minister of water came out and declared the water saline and too expensive to desalinate, even though it was initially announced as fresh water.
Why?
The second discovery is.
2. Oil worth over $250B in only 4 wells.
Underline only.
Those who studied stratigraphy know we have more oil than Venezuela's $33 Trillion but that is a story for another day.
Yes, you heard that right.
Back to the 4 wells;
Tullows, a London registered oil corporation, the same one that had won the tender for Ngamia 1, claimed they couldn't extract the oil.
Because...they didn't have the technology.
Immediately after, Kenyan excellent thugs, rushed to privatise the land.
A firm allied to Moses Wetangula managed to privatise the land, endowed with two hundred and fifty billion dollars for only eight hundred and forty million Kenyan shillings.
A few years later, Tullows allowed for a subsidiary to be registered, Gulf Energy, majority owned by Kenya's political class.
And finally, they are extracting the oil.
They have the technology.
When the quest for independence grew and became uncontrollable, British government rushed to do geological surveys of Kenya.
To map mineral formations and endowment.
They discovered that our land had over 970 minerals, all economically viable.
So to hide them, they declared reserve concentration points as national parks, national reserves, animal sanctuaries, conservancies and forests.
Get it?
They don't care for the baby elephants, it's what the cute jumbo helps them conceal.
Economic freedom, absolute liberty and sovereignty won't be restored by digital anger.
I beseech you, take this fight for your livelihoods to the streets.
The streets is where they can't control you.
Non-stop mass action.
Mothers, fathers, children and the youth in the frontline.
It'd take you 30 minutes to get back your power.
Article one of the CoK clearly stipulates you can administer yourselves directly too.
Get up off your knees, let's get free.
Homeland✊🏿🇰🇪✊🏿
Cancer was, in the 1920s, named the disease of the modern industrial age.
Otto Warburg, working in Berlin, demonstrated that cancer cells run on glucose. They prefer it. They run on it inefficiently, even in the presence of oxygen, in a way healthy cells do not. He won the Nobel Prize in 1931 for the work. The mechanism is now called the Warburg effect and sits in every oncology textbook published since.
In the 1970s, an American radiologist used Warburg's principle to build the PET scan. He injected radioactive glucose into the patient, waited twenty minutes, and watched on the screen where the glucose concentrated. The tumour lit up. The healthy tissue did not.
The machine has been used millions of times. It is, mechanically, a sugar detector. The thing it is detecting is the thing the cancer is eating.
The patient, after the scan, walks down the corridor to the oncology consultation. The oncologist explains the diagnosis. The dietitian, often in the same building, recommends wholegrain pasta, oat porridge, and fruit at every meal as part of a balanced recovery diet.
The mechanism is in the textbook. The textbook is on the shelf. The shelf is in the same building as the dietitian.
The two have not been introduced.
@SaysGate@be_like_ice Some of my family members do it and I want to throw them off a cliff every single time. They are not bad people but they don't realize people may not want them around unexpectedly and maybe I am recovering and I am exhausted. The end is the rude one is me because of boundaries.
@be_like_ice Interruptions. Unexpected Drop-ins so now I have to awkwardly socialize. Someone talking endlessly to make a point that I already got in the first 5 minutes. Arrrg!
Do you know that well over 50 different illnesses and conditions in medicine can manifest as a sore throat?
See, this is why I always say doctors should stop dragging arguments online with other health professionals over things like this.
These people don't know pathology.
Because once conversations like this start, you begin to realize how deep medicine actually is.
Now look at this whole “why go to the hospital for sore throat when you can just go to the pharmacy” argument that has been flying around Twitter.
The funny thing is that many people saying this are thinking of only one type of sore throat — the common viral sore throat, usually pharyngitis from common cold viruses, which in many cases even resolves on its own after a few days.
Fine.
But medicine does not end at “common sore throat.”
That is the problem.
Tonsillitis can present as sore throat.
Peritonsillar abscess can present as sore throat.
Acid reflux can present as sore throat.
Gonorrhea of the throat can present as sore throat.
Sinus infections can present as sore throat.
Influenza can present as sore throat.
COVID can present as sore throat.
Measles can present as sore throat.
Chickenpox can present as sore throat.
Acute HIV infection can present as sore throat.
CMV infection can present as sore throat.
Environmental irritation can present as sore throat.
Allergies can present as sore throat.
And yes,throat cancers can initially present as “ordinary sore throat.”
That is the point.
Medicine is not just about hearing symptoms and handing out drugs.
The actual work is in understanding what could be behind the symptom.
That is why diagnosis is difficult.
Because two completely different diseases can produce the exact same complaint.
One patient says:
“My throat hurts.”
It is simple viral pharyngitis.
Another patient says:
“My throat hurts.”
It is reflux.
Another says:
“My throat hurts.”
It is early malignancy.
Another says:
“My throat hurts.”
It is an STI.
Now this is where the actual argument begins.
When some people online reduce all of this to:
“Why see a doctor for sore throat?”
—you begin to see the knowledge gap immediately.
Because the issue is not whether pharmacists understand medications. Of course they do. The issue is that manifestations in medicine are broad, deceptive, and layered.
Very layered.
A symptom is not automatically a diagnosis.
And this is exactly why medicine takes years and years of pathology, microbiology, physiology, pharmacology, internal medicine, surgery, ENT rotations, infectious disease teaching, and clinical exposure.
Because common symptoms are not always common diseases.
That is the entire point.
Now, does every sore throat require rushing to a hospital?
Obviously no.
Many sore throats are simple and self-limiting.
But the confidence with which some people online reduce a symptom to a single pathway is exactly why doctors become defensive about clinical judgment.
Because once you actually study medicine deeply, you realize something uncomfortable:
The body is not straightforward.
Symptoms overlap.
Diseases mimic each other.
And “simple” symptoms sometimes hide dangerous pathology underneath.
This conversation honestly just shows how differently various professions are trained to approach illness.
A pharmacist may understandably focus on symptomatic relief and medication access.
A doctor is trained to obsess over differential diagnosis and worst-case possibilities before excluding them.
Those are two different mindsets entirely.
And this is why these arguments online always become heated.
Because one side is looking at medication.
The other side is looking at pathology.
Completely different lenses.