Facts "shine the light" on truth and bring opinions closer to reality. Married to a wonderful man; no DM's. Truth seeker, populist, America comes first.
@darthom50@DavidJHarrisJr I know that, but thanks. 😄
Like I said, I just hope that he also includes other things for those of us who don't get into that.
‘They were EMBARRASSED of the Q people’ — MTG on the White House’s Q posting
‘The Trump team would throw out people, any rally attendee, if they had a Q shirt, QAnon, storm has arrived, WWG1WGA’
In memory of the 1.5 million horses & mules who gave their lives in the Civil War by being killed in battle, wounded, or lost to disease.
This powerful memorial honors their silent sacrifice alongside Union & Confederate soldiers.
Lest we forget the true cost of war.
🚨JUST IN🚨
President Trump to join the Senate’s Republican lunch at the Capitol this upcoming Wednesday.
I wonder if he’ll bring up the SAVE America Act.
Read the new book by JFK and The Unspeakable author James W. Douglass.
He concisely shows how CIA worked through NYPD BOSI Unit to Assassinated Malcolm X, who threatened the CIA's escalation of their Vietnam War just two months after the hit. Malcolm X was gonna a be a major hindrance on that Escalator.
🎹🎵🎼War is not the answer.. only the black **WORKING CLASS** can conquer systemically programmed hate 🎶🎵
Also shows how the key man in BOSI Unit [it could get kinda bossy] was later key man in organizing the Watergate Plumbers.
It is criminal that our government enabled a bat virus to infect and spread between humans. Indeed, it is hard to imagine a bigger betrayal of our species.
It is equally troubling that the mad scientists who did this then gaslit all the people of the world about it, including those who CORRECTLY interpreted the evidence.
Then, of course, the very same monsters amped up fear of the Covid frankenvirus and steered the panicked public away from safe medicines, and toward an obviously dangerous gene-therapy which they falsely called a vaccine in order to lure us into acceptance.
These are among the greatest crimes EVER committed against humanity. We now have persuasive evidence of everything I have said above.
If we don't correct the record and hold the perpetrators to account, this pattern will happen again, and again, and again--shortening our life expectancy, and degrading our quality of life each time that it does.
This is our Nuremberg moment. We can not simply move on from this ghastly chapter of history. We must finish it.
@brownstoneinst
Do you know the Soros foundation distributed identical instruction leaflets to protesters in both the 2014 Maidan Square uprising in Kiev and the 2011 Tahrir Square unrest in Cairo?
One was in Ukrainian, the other in Arabic.
Same playbook, different battleground...
Here's what you missed:
The origins: US
Gain of function: US
Millions of US taxpayer dollars laundered thru EcoHealth and USAID among others to fund the Wuhan lab: US
So if the US creates it, weaponizes it, funds the foreign lab where it is released and then blames that country for its release, it seems a little disingenuous to most ppl with a functioning brain.
autonomous robot driving through the field at night. no chemicals. no pesticides. just UV light killing pathogens and pests while everyone sleeps. this is @tricrobotics.
this is what chemical-free pest control looks like at scale.
I went to the shelter looking for one old cat.
Two untouched food bowls changed my mind.
At the end of a row of cages sat two senior cats pressed tightly together.
An orange cat named Otis.
A gray cat named Milo.
Neither touched their food.
Neither seemed interested in the people walking by.
They only seemed interested in each other.
I had come with a plan.
My children were grown.
My husband had been gone for years.
The house was quiet.
Too quiet.
I didn’t want a kitten.
I wanted one older cat.
Someone who understood long naps, sunny windows, and peaceful afternoons.
Then the shelter worker stopped in front of Otis and Milo.
“They lost their person,” she said.
I nodded.
Then she told me the rest.
After their owner died, the cats spent days sitting outside the locked front door waiting for someone who was never coming home.
A neighbor left food.
Otis would eat a little and then step aside for Milo.
Milo wouldn’t eat unless Otis sat beside him.
When rescuers arrived, Milo hid under the porch.
Otis stayed in the yard and made one small sound.
Milo came out immediately.
That detail broke my heart.
Not because it was dramatic.
Because it was simple.
Two frightened old cats had lost everything.
And somehow they still found comfort in each other.
The shelter tried finding them homes.
Families wanted one cat.
Not two.
Some thought they were too old.
Others thought Milo seemed too withdrawn.
One family wanted only Otis.
The shelter tried separating them once.
Just once.
Otis stopped eating.
Milo sat facing a wall for hours.
They never tried again.
I kept reminding myself:
One cat.
One bed.
One food bowl.
One set of vet bills.
One small companion.
That was the plan.
Then Otis slowly stood.
His legs were stiff.
His fur was thin.
He didn’t try to impress me.
He simply stepped in front of Milo.
Like a tired older brother protecting the only family he had left.
Milo finally looked up.
The shelter worker opened the cage.
I sat on the floor.
Otis approached first.
Careful.
Suspicious.
Then Milo leaned forward.
Just a little.
And rested his chin on my hand.
Not a purr.
Not a cuddle.
Just a tiny act of trust.
As if he were asking:
“Are we allowed to stay together this time?”
That was it.
I was done.
I looked at the shelter worker and said:
“I think I’m going to need two cat beds.”
She immediately turned away so I wouldn’t see her cry.
The ride home was quiet.
At one stoplight, I glanced in the rearview mirror.
Otis had his chin resting on Milo’s head.
For the first time, neither looked afraid.
At home, I put down two bowls.
This time, they ate.
Side by side.
That night I found them sleeping together beside the living room window.
Otis had one paw draped across Milo’s back.
Milo was tucked against his chest.
Neither looked like they were waiting anymore.
I can’t replace the person they lost.
Some loves leave spaces nobody else is meant to fill.
But maybe love doesn’t have to replace what came before.
Maybe it just sits quietly beside it.
Otis and Milo didn’t need a perfect home.
They only needed the same home.
And somehow, in giving that to them, they gave something back to me.
I went looking for one old cat.
Instead, two old cats made my house feel like home again.
Via Born Legend
@history_hacked Really interesting, thanks. What book is that an excerpt from, by the way?
I can see why libraries could be inconvenient for those who want to manage history.
RFK Jr. tells Theo Von about the Monsanto trial, where an EPA official was caught asking for a “gold medal” to kill a study that showed Roundup caused cancer.
The jury was so angry, they awarded the plaintiffs more money than they asked for.
It all started when a married couple of home gardeners were both diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma at the same time. Their Labrador retriever got it, too. The dog died.
RFK Jr. asked the jury for $1 billion.
Then he showed them the emails…
RFK JR: “We asked the jury for a billion dollars. They gave us 2.2 billion.”
“And they did that because we were able to show them documents that showed Monsanto knew of the danger and then worked with corrupt officials — a guy called Jess Rowland inside of EPA, who was the head of the pesticide division.”
“They had deliberately concealed the science, fixed the science. And now the big study that they used to prove safety has been retracted.”
THEO: ��They’d found emails that it was kind of ghostwritten or something?”
RFK JR: “The head of the pesticide division — Monsanto asked him secretly, and now we have these emails — to kill a study by another agency called ATSDR.”
“And he said, ‘I can’t kill it. That’s not my agency. I can kill them in EPA, but not outside.’”
“And they said, ‘You got to do it. We can’t have this study go forward.’ And he said, ‘Okay, I’m going to do it, but if I succeed, you got to give me a gold medal.’”
THEO VON: “A gold medal in what? Just anything?”
RFK JR: “A gold medal for killing a study that showed that it caused cancer.”
THEO VON: “That’s insane! It’s at a contest level now. Things like that are so prolific that now there are awards for it. It seems baffling.”
HHS Secretary RFK Jr. sounds the alarm on America’s chronic disease epidemic.
In a minute flat, Kennedy dropped several absolutely devastating stats that show just how dire the situation has become.
KENNEDY: “Consider the scale of the problem we face.”
“Today, 90% of healthcare spending goes toward treating chronic disease.”
“We calculated recently that if you include the VA and the Pentagon, and the Social Security office and my agency, we spend today about 48 cents out of every federal dollar that Americans pay in taxes, now goes to healthcare.”
“And 98% of that goes to chronic disease, most of which are linked to our food.”
“More than 70% of American adults are overweight or obese.”
“One third of teenagers have diabetes or pre-diabetes, 38%.”
“This is not only a public health challenge, it’s a national security issue.”
“About 77% of American children can now no longer qualify for military service.”
“And that’s something that should get everybody’s attention.”