Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 1:45 p.m. No.20778259   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8295

>>20778068 (lb)

 

Deportation by who?

To where? Undocumented means without nation, citizenship. While many foreign occupiers are identifiable, many still are actually undocumented/unknown- from central and south america, africa, and asia.

 

Spouseanon has seen many many pregnant patients who speak Nahuatl solely, not Spanish or English, as example. Do not know their sir names nor DOBs. Send them where? And as 'asylum seekers', how does 'mass deportation' work legally, even if there was a force or authority, or logistical capability to do so?

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 1:53 p.m. No.20778298   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8304 >>8572 >>8745 >>8775 >>8895

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2024-04-25/la-me-usc-commencement-canceled

 

USC cancels ‘main stage’ commencement ceremony

 

USC announced Thursday that it is canceling its main May commencement ceremony, capping a dramatic series of moves that began last week after it informed valedictorian Asna Tabassum, who had been opposed by pro-Israel groups, that she would not be delivering the traditional speech.

 

In ending the university-wide May 10 graduation ceremony altogether, which was expected to draw 65,000 people to Alumni Park, USC aimed to quell the controversy that grew as it dismantled aspects of the ceremony, drawing criticism from both pro-Palestinian and pro-Israel activists nationwide.

 

“We understand that this is disappointing; however, we are adding many new activities and celebrations to make this commencement academically meaningful, memorable, and uniquely USC, including places to gather with family, friends, faculty, and staff, the celebratory releasing of the doves, and performances by the Trojan Marching Band,” USC said in a statement.

 

The university also announced that it will require tickets for “all commencement events taking place on May 8-11” and direct “all campus access through specific points of entry.”

 

Since citing unspecified security threats as the reason for canceling Tabassum’s speech, USC has faced multiple on-campus protests, including a pro-Palestinian encampment occupied by students calling for a cease-fire in Gaza and divestment from weapons manufacturers with links to Israel. That demonstration led to the Los Angeles Police Department making dozens of arrests. USC joins campuses across the country where conflict has deepened since Hamas invaded Israel on Oct. 7.

 

Before canceling the entire ceremony, university officials had followed their cancellation of Tabassum’s speech by calling off a speech by director Jon M. Chu and appearances on the main stage by honorary doctorate recipients, including tennis star Billie Jean King, saying they wanted to “keep the focus on our graduates.”

 

Twenty-three satellite graduation ceremonies at USC’s schools and colleges will continue as scheduled, in addition to smaller departmental receptions.

 

That includes keynote addresses by some who were told not to appear on the main stage but who had already been booked for smaller commencement ceremonies, including King, who is scheduled to address Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism graduates on May 10.

 

King has not responded to interview requests from The Times.

 

National Endowment for the Arts Chair Maria Rosario Jackson, who was also deprived of the chance to receive an honorary degree on the main stage, is scheduled to deliver a May 10 keynote speech to graduates of the USC Price School of Public Policy.

 

Via an NEA spokeswoman, Price declined an interview request.

 

Actor and activist Sean Penn will also still give a May 11 address to graduates of the Alfred E. Mann School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, according to his representative.

 

The last time the main USC commencement was canceled was in 2020 after the start of the pandemic. Those graduates participated in online and in-person ceremonies the next year, along with the Class of 2021.

p1

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 1:55 p.m. No.20778304   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20778298

 

“This is a rather unusual commencement, to put it in obvious terms,” said Donal Manahan, a USC biologist who has been the university marshal for the main stage ceremony since 2016. “It’s the whole country going through it.”

 

The saga at USC began on April 15, when Provost Andrew T. Guzman released a campus-wide letter citing unnamed threats that came after the university announced Tabassum as the valedictorian and a scheduled speaker. Guzman said the attacks were of an “alarming tenor” and “escalated to the point of creating substantial risks relating to security and disruption at commencement.”

 

Guzman did not say what the threats were or who was targeted. A spokeswoman for the Los Angeles Police Department told The Times that the agency had no crime reports regarding violent threats targeting Tabassum or the commencement ceremony.

 

The complaints focused on a link on Tabassum’s Instagram profile to a pro-Palestinian website that said, “Zionism is a racist settler-colonialist ideology,” and, “One Palestinian state would mean Palestinian liberation and the complete abolishment of the state of Israel” so that “both Arabs and Jews can live together.”

 

Tabassum has denied she supports antisemitic views and said she is being singled out as a hijab-wearing Muslim woman.

 

Then last Friday, USC called off an appearance by Chu — the director of “Crazy Rich Asians” — and other commencement honorees. In canceling those events, USC cited “the highly publicized circumstances surrounding our main stage commencement program.”

 

In an interview prior to Thursday’s announcement of the main stage cancellation, Joel Curran, USC’s senior vice president of communications, said the decision about Chu and honorary degree recipients was done in order to avoid putting them “in an awkward situation” to address the valedictorian controversy or the Israel-Hamas war.

 

“We are putting them in an awkward situation, difficult situation. There have been a lot of conversations around commencement. We do not want to put them in that position,” Curran said.

 

USC is one of dozens of colleges and universities where tensions have grown in recent weeks over free speech and protest over the Israel-Hamas war, including Columbia, Yale, UC Berkeley and Cal Poly Humboldt.

 

In its Oct. 7 attack on Israel, Hamas militants killed about 1,200 people and took roughly 240 hostages. Gaza health authorities say Israel’s retaliatory war has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians. According to the United Nations, 2 million Gazans are living in near-famine conditions.

 

2 of 2

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 1:56 p.m. No.20778308   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8330 >>8339 >>8398 >>8572 >>8626 >>8691 >>8745 >>8775 >>8895

https://twitter.com/SenseReceptor/status/1782996961978634374

 

Sense Receptor

@SenseReceptor

"I didn't know it was possible for a human to die so horrifically, so quickly, before they rolled out the mRNA injections…[For] days, patients would be seizing, and no medications would stop it, and eventually they…kinda had to be put down."

 

A hospital medical coder who goes only by "Zoe" for this interview describes for Children's Health Defense (@ChildrensHD) the horrors she witnessed following the rollout of the COVID injections. Among the unthinkable, and deadly, illnesses were things like encephalitis, gangrene of the spine, blood clots, strokes, and multiple system organ failure.

 

"I didn't know it was possible for a human to die so horrifically, so quickly, before they rolled out the mRNA injections…It was insane, I've never seen anything like that. The worst of them, they called it sepsis, but it was like instant multi-organ failure. Like, within hours patients would die of liver, lung, kidney… failure [all at once]…" Zoe tells CHD. She adds that "Some of the records…[from the] emergency crew that found them [the injection victims], it's like their body tried to reject everything and [in] some of these cases their family would be there 30 minutes before, and then within an hour they're dead."

 

Zoe notes that "there were patients coming in with seizures like I'd never seen before," and that hospital staff "couldn't control some of them." The coder adds, "[For] days, patients would be seizing, and no medications would stop it, and eventually they…kinda had to be put down."

 

"They called it encephalitis, or encephalopathy, and then later on, even the coding organization…[called it] COVID-19-associated encephalitis," Zoe says.

 

"[T]he clots were insane," the coder notes. "Never seen clots like that before—even the interventional radiologists that were going in with…scopes where they can do heart interventions and do stents [a stent is a tube usually constructed of a metallic alloy or a polymer] in carotid artery (if you have a stroke going to your brain), normally it's rare to have more than one stent go in, and they were documenting…multiple locations all at once. They had heart attack cases that were like that where they needed massive amounts of stents that they never needed before."

 

Zoe goes on to say that "There were people that were hiking in their 20s that were totally healthy, that had been running marathons, that suddenly needed a leg amputated because they had a massive blood clot going from their hip all the way down to their leg, and it couldn't be saved."

 

"There were some cases of overnight spinal gangrene, which I'd never seen before," the coder adds. "And, you know, you can't amputate the spine when it goes gangrenous. Normally they cut out tissue that's dying like that so it prevents further infection and they didn't know what to do. The only thing they could do was…basically replace that part of [their] spine with an implant, that's the best they could do… It was really intense."

 

As for doctors' responses to these horrors, Zoe says, "[they] were baffled, they weren't connecting the dots." However, she adds that "Knowing what the potential symptoms of a vaccine injury could be, we 100% had all the things I just described." Despite that knowledge, "doctors would never tell [patients] that. They would just say, 'It's a stroke. It's a heart attack. It's a blood clot.' And then they would never connect the two."

0:03 / 4:34

11:56 PM · Apr 23, 2024

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 2 p.m. No.20778319   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8341

>>20778295

perhaps. Though what authority can and would

a. determine this

b. affect a deportation

 

surely not the US govt, US judicial system, US LEO infrastructure, or US mil based on… the entire history of the USA. So who?

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 2:19 p.m. No.20778403   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8406 >>8441

>>20778341

>Beginning next year, ICE will be aided by many other federal agencies, as well as state law enforcement, when the largest deportation operation in US history begins.

sauce?

You think they are going to be 'dormant' as embedded resources for a year, why?

 

Aren't the immigration courts the ones giving them court dats >1year out aswell?

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 2:47 p.m. No.20778531   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8537

>>20778441

the 'lock her up' promises from 'the snake' continue. Sorry, anon, zero trust in that happening. stood up against the Federal Reserve to expose and end it, to exit the UN, to expose and end MRNA tech or 5G or weather modification, or mil and media psyops or etc. The only ones truly pursuing 100% revelation of truth are some anons, based on works and fruits. In fact, anons don't make promises or 'im gonna' statements at all. kek

 

BTW- he NEVER

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 2:48 p.m. No.20778537   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20778531

>BTW- he NEVER

stood up against the Federal Reserve to expose and end it, to exit the UN, to expose and end MRNA tech or 5G or weather modification, or mil and media psyops or etc

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 2:57 p.m. No.20778577   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8582 >>8745 >>8775 >>8895

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/policy/space/2978857/nasa-administrator-no-idea-why-china-going-far-side-moon-always-dark/

 

NASA administrator has ‘no idea’ why China is going to far side of moon that is ‘always in dark’

 

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson is being mocked for suggesting the far side of the moon is always “dark” and can’t explain why China is interested in exploring that part of the moon.

 

“What do you think the Chinese are trying to get at, at the back side of the moon?” Rep. David Trone (D-MD) asked Nelson at a congressional hearing last week.

 

“They are going to have a lander on the far side of the moon, which is the side which is always in dark. Uh, we’re not planning to go there,” he said.

 

BILL NELSON, PROFESSIONAL IDIOT IN CHARGE OF NASA, THINKS THE FAR SIDE OF THE MOON IS "DARK" IMPLYING THAT'S WHY WE'RE NOT GOING THERE FOR THAT REASON.

 

IN CASE YOU'RE WONDERING WHY WEREN'T NOT BACK ON THE MOON YETPIC.TWITTER.COM/3SPBASQTFG

 

— FilmLadd (@FilmLadd) April 23, 2024

Trone followed up by asking, “And why not? What’s the benefit of doing so?”

 

“We don’t know what’s on the back side of the moon, so, uh, that would be something that they would discover,” the NASA administrator told lawmakers on Capitol Hill.

 

“But our decision is that it’s more profitable for us to go to the South Pole of the moon because that’s where we think the water is,” he added.

 

The Maryland congressman pressed Nelson on why China chose to go to the far side of the moon.

 

“Why do you think they made that decision? I’m curious,” Trone said.

 

“I have no idea,” Nelson said.

 

The far side of the moon is not “always in dark” and gets sunlight, but it is not visible from the Earth because the moon is tidally locked to the Earth.

 

Nelson’s comment occurred when he testified before the House Appropriations Committee on NASA’s budget for fiscal 2025.

 

The social media clip of Nelson went viral on Tuesday, garnering mockery of the NASA leader.

 

“Is this real?” someone said on X.

 

“Bill Nelson, professional idiot in charge of NASA, thinks the far side of the moon is ‘dark’ implying that’s why we’re not going there for that reason. In case you’re wondering why [we’re] not back on the moon yet,” a social media user said.

 

“If Nelson and Sheila Jackson Lee did a podcast about space I’d definitely listen,” another person quipped about the Texas Democratic congresswoman, who recently told schoolchildren that the moon is a “planet” and “made up mostly of gases.”

 

Nelson’s answer of having “no idea” why China has been venturing toward the far side of the moon is surprising because China’s first lunar sample-gathering rover reportedly extracted a sample of helium-3 from the moon in 2020. Helium-3 is believed to be in abundance in that part of the moon due to that part being exposed to solar winds at a higher degree. China has been interested in mining helium-3.

 

China has waged an economic war of creating a near monopoly of critical minerals on Earth and has been looking to lock up energy resources on the moon in its quest for space supremacy.

 

Astronaut Harrison Schmitt, the only living member of NASA’s Apollo 17 mission, has long advocated using helium-3 as an alternative source of energy on Earth and in space travel. Schmitt, a geologist, discovered it on the moon 50 years ago and has been pushing for the isotope to be mined as a fuel in fusion reactors. It is believed that the moon’s supply of helium-3 could be a source of limitless clean energy.

 

Former CIA space analyst Tim Chrisman reportedly said Beijing is charging forward in extracting energy in space and could leave the United States behind.

 

“China will almost certainly use any resources it is able to acquire to the detriment of its adversaries, competitors and bystanders alike,” Chrisman said.

 

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

 

“Just a couple of trips a year would be able to supply most of Earth with ‘clean’ power if it was used effectively. So yes, it seems like a fairly big deal if we were to make use of it,” a Reddit commenter analyzed, adding, “This seems like something that government officials should be aware of/care about.”

 

During the committee hearing, Nelson said China has “made huge strides in the last 10 years, and you better not take anything for granted.”

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 3:15 p.m. No.20778655   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8686 >>8691

>>20778626

'just following orders'

'trusting the science'

etc

 

but when the military deploys a weapons platform as a nano/bio agent via its pharma contractors who were contracted by the same mil DARPA to make the tech, at the behest of the US govt, all culpability falls on the mil chain of command. Aka the President, thus the push for 'immunity' IMHO.

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 3:20 p.m. No.20778691   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8723 >>8745 >>8775 >>8895

>>20778655

>>20778626

>>20778308

 

Notice the EUA was from HHS ANDDOD, and it is posed on the defense.gov site.

 

https://www.defense.gov/News/Releases/Release/Article/2445116/statement-from-hhs-and-dod-on-fda-emergency-use-authorization-of-a-covid-19-vac/

 

Statement From HHS and DOD on FDA Emergency Use Authorization of a COVID-19 Vaccine Candidate

Dec. 11, 2020 |

Today the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued an Emergency Use Authorization (EUA) to Pfizer for its COVID-19 vaccine, the first authorization for a COVID-19 vaccine in the United States. Operation Warp Speed and private sector partners now begin distributing the first allocation of doses to sites designated by the public health jurisdictions and five federal agencies with which OWS and CDC have been working to plan distribution. HHS Secretary Alex Azar and Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher C. Miller released the following statements:

 

“It is nothing short of a medical miracle to have FDA authorization of a vaccine for COVID-19 just over 11 months since the virus was made known to the world. Because of President Trump’s strong leadership and unwavering support for Operation Warp Speed, we have millions of doses of this vaccine that are now being shipped to every corner of America, with administration to begin as soon as providers are ready. The triumph of Operation Warp Speed is a tribute to dedicated public servants across HHS and the Department of Defense, our partners in the private sector, and incredible American scientists. This vaccine, like any vaccine FDA potentially authorizes, has been through multiple stages of safety review, and it has shown extraordinary effectiveness in protecting people from the virus. Vaccines will help bring this pandemic to an end, which is all the more reason to double down on the public health measures we need to stay safe in the coming months. As Americans get vaccinated, we need to continue taking steps like washing our hands, social distancing, and wearing face coverings to protect ourselves, our loved ones, and our communities.” - HHS Secretary Alex M. Azar II

 

“The massive logistical planning our military has contributed to Operation Warp Speed gives me even more pride in the talent and dedication of our service members.They have been crucial in bringing a safe and effective vaccine to the American people and in restoring the health of our country.” - Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher C. Miller

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 3:25 p.m. No.20778723   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20778691

>Acting Secretary of Defense Christopher C. Miller

 

Miller was Sec Def for 2 months- the month before and the month after the mrna gene editing technology jab rollout.

 

Christopher Charles Miller (born October 15, 1965) is an American retired United States Army Special Forces colonel who served as acting United States secretary of defense from November 9, 2020, to January 20, 2021.

 

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) first granted emergency use authorization to the Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine on December 10, 2020, and mass vaccinations began four days later.

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 3:30 p.m. No.20778740   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20778686

Agree. however, most here would want to see the CIC at that time have immunity. This anon wants ALL complicit, exposed and tried, no matter title, current or former.

 

How many US presidents have known the genocidal plans? All living ones, no doubt. How many DARPA heads? Sec Defs? Intel agency heads? Congressmen? CDC,m USAMRIID, and NIH leadership? etc…

Anonymous ID: c1c8ea April 25, 2024, 4:02 p.m. No.20778912   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.foxnews.com/world/russia-grounds-seize-western-assets-us-legislative-move-top-lawmaker-says

 

Russia has grounds to seize Western assets after US legislative move, top lawmaker says

 

Less than $6 billion of Russian assets are in the US, while about 210 billion euros are in the EU

 

The U.S. House passed legislation allowing the transfer of seized Russian assets to Ukraine, prompting Russia to consider confiscating Western assets.

Russian lawmaker Vyacheslav Volodin warned that this move could provoke the EU to follow suit, potentially damaging the European economy.

Only $5 to $6 billion of Russian assets are in the U.S., while about 210 billion euros are in the European Union.

Russia now has grounds to confiscate Western assets after the U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation that would allow the potential transfer of seized Russian assets to Ukraine, a top Russian lawmaker said on Monday.

 

"Washington has passed a law on the confiscation of Russian assets in order to provoke the EU to take the same step, which will be devastating for the European economy," Vyacheslav Volodin, the Duma speaker and close ally of President Vladimir Putin, said.

 

"Our country now has every reason to make symmetrical decisions in relation to foreign assets," said Volodin.

 

BLINKEN RETURNS TO CHINA WITH WARNING OVER RUSSIAN MILITARY AID

 

Volodin said that of the $280 billion of Russian assets frozen abroad, only $5 to $6 billion was in the United States.

 

Vyacheslav Volodin

Russian parliament speaker Vyacheslav Volodin attends a session during a vote for the pension reform bill at the State Duma, the lower house of parliament, in Moscow, Russia, on Sept. 26, 2018. Russia now has grounds to confiscate Western assets after the U.S. House of Representatives passed legislation that would allow the potential transfer of seized Russian assets to Ukraine, Volodin said on Monday. (REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin/File Photo)

 

About $224 billion was in the European Union.

 

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

 

The House passed the "REPO Act" which would allow the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden to confiscate billions of dollars’ worth of Russian assets sitting in U.S. banks and transfer them to Ukraine for reconstruction.