Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 5 p.m. No.96143   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>96141

i didn't like it when i watched awhile back (not my style i suppose and i hate hwood these days so all movies are suspicious ha)

i caught the last half the other day; a movie where ppl became scared of the air

ppl knitting w gas masks on

ppl in cheap masks

fear fear fear

run run run

don't travel in large groups; divide divide divide

it seems like strange propaganda w what's going on these days

makes me wonder about what the director knew and who he chills w (hrc?)

ha idk but weinstein speilberg

example: "Hillary Clinton partners with Steven Spielberg for new TV show

Aug 1, 2018 … Hillary Clinton and Steven Spielberg are teaming on a TV project based on the Elaine Weiss book “The Woman's Hour: The Great Fight To Win …"

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 5:07 p.m. No.96146   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6154 >>6193

>>96127

in recent episodes Dan has been exposing fake news, ivermechtin, and horses ha

https://rumble.com/vm798h-ep.-1599-i-swear-to-you-theres-an-american-awakening-happening-the-dan-bong.html

 

Ep. 1599 I Swear To You, There's An American Awakening Happening - The Dan Bongino Show

The Dan Bongino Show

Published September 7, 2021 138,826 Views

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 5:13 p.m. No.96147   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6149

oh and i don't trust joe rogan fyi

but i will take his info and leave his opinion where i found it ha

mostly i skip joe and tune into other podcasts

Dan, Rudy, Sara, Sharyl Attkisson (who did a good job exposing masks fauci therapeutics), Solomon, Hodge(s), Diamond and Silk, etc

but if Rogan is GOOD thas cool; we need all the help we can get

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 7:41 p.m. No.96178   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6193

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/4-prisoners-bowe-bergdahl-exchange-obama-senior-taliban-posts

Four out of five Guantanamo detainees whom former President Barack Obama released in exchange for former U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl in 2014 now hold senior positions in the interim government created by the Taliban in Afghanistan.

 

According to the Afghan television network TOLOnews, the Taliban-formed government gave leadership positions to Khairullah Khairkhwa, Norullah Noori, Abdul Haq Wasiq, and Mohammad Fazl; all of whom were released in a 2014 deal between the Obama administration and the Taliban to free Bergdahl, whom the Taliban had held as a prisoner since 2009.

 

On Tuesday, the Taliban announced that Khairkhwa would serve as acting minister for information and culture, Noori would serve as acting minister of borders and tribal affairs, Wasiq would serve as acting director of intelligence, and Fazl would serve as deputy defense minister.

 

Wasiq will reprise his role as the Taliban's intelligence director, previously serving in the role prior to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on America. U.S. intelligence agencies determined that Wasiq had close tied to al Qaeda while he was serving in that position at the time.

 

Thomas Joscelyn, a senior fellow for the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), noted that Fazl will also return to his role as deputy defense minister. "U.S. officials found that Fazl worked with senior al Qaeda personnel, including Abdel Hadi al Iraqi, one of Osama bin Laden's chief lieutenants," Joscelyn wrote in a tweet. "Al Iraqi is still held at Guantanamo."

 

Late last month, following the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan, the Taliban announced that Mohammad Nabi Omari, another former Guantanamo Bay Naval Base (GTMO) detainee with close ties to al Qaeda, would govern Khost Province. ..

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 7:41 p.m. No.96179   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6193

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2021/08/19/justice-department-moves-dismiss-bowe-bergdahls-case-overturn-his-conviction.html

 

The U.S. government has filed a motion to dismiss Bowe Bergdahl's petition to have his military conviction and sentence overturned.

 

Attorneys with the Justice Department's civil division filed a motion Aug. 2 asking U.S. District Court Senior Judge Reggie Walton to throw out the case of the former Army sergeant, who pleaded guilty in 2017 to desertion and misbehavior before the enemy after leaving his post in Afghanistan in June 2009.

 

Bergdahl was a private first class on July 30, 2009, stationed at Observation Post Mest, Afghanistan. Assigned to guard duty the following day and a convoy to a nearby forward operating base, he left the post. He later said that he wanted to call attention to poor leadership in his unit and his observations of the situation in Afghanistan.

 

He was captured by the Taliban and held captive for five years. His departure from the remote observation base set off a massive search-and-rescue mission that involved thousands of U.S. troops, some of whom were injured in the effort.

 

Bergdahl has been back in the headlines since the Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan. One of the leaders allegedly responsible for orchestrating the takeover, Khairullah Khairkhwa, was one of five prisoners freed from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and exchanged for Bergdahl's release in 2014, various media outlets have reported.

 

Bergdahl first appealed his case in 2019, arguing that negative remarks made by President Donald Trump and Sen. John McCain constituted unlawful command influence and may have unfairly swayed the court-martial proceedings.

 

In a 3-2 decision in August 2020, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces upheld his conviction, saying the comments did not invalidate his prosecution and pointing out that he had pleaded guilty.

 

Bergdahl then filed a suit this past February in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia, seeking to have his case overturned.

 

In requesting that the case be dismissed, Julia Heiman, senior counsel for the Justice Department, argued that the military courts have "exhaustively considered" the unlawful command influence issue.

 

Heiman noted that Bergdahl raised the issue of unlawful command influence three times during court-martial proceedings and at least five times during his appeal.

 

"It would be an understatement to say that the military courts 'fully' considered plaintiff's claims of unlawful command influence," she wrote in the motion to dismiss. ..

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 7:43 p.m. No.96180   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>6183 >>6193

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/03/15/magazine/bowe-bergdahl-afghanistan-book.html

(nyt; think mirror?)

 

By Lauren Katzenberg

 

March 15, 2019

 

A conversation with Matt Farwell, author of “American Cipher: Bowe Bergdahl and the U.S. Tragedy in Afghanistan” (Penguin Press, 2019).

 

The same day in June 2009 that Bowe Bergdahl, a 23-year-old private first class from Sun Valley, Idaho, walked off his military outpost in Paktika, Afghanistan, Sgt. Matt Farwell received the news that a friend with whom he served in 2007 had overdosed on opioids at his home in Alabama. On the ground in Afghanistan, the Army mobilized a weekslong search for the missing soldier. Back in the United States, the service denied Farwell’s friend a military burial because he had a less-than-honorable discharge for drug use — a habit Farwell says was a result of his deteriorating mental health following their tour in Afghanistan. Farwell and three other soldiers attended the funeral in uniform and delivered an American flag to their friend’s family, since the Army wouldn’t. “I was still reeling from that when I heard a soldier had gone missing in Afghanistan,” Farwell says. “For the past 10 years, I think I channeled a lot of that grief into interest — to the point of obsession — with the Bergdahl story.”

 

Within hours of walking away, Bergdahl was captured by the Taliban, and he was brutally tortured for nearly five years before being returned to the United States. Seven months after Bergdahl disappeared, Farwell’s older brother, Chief Warrant Officer Gary Marc Farwell, was killed in a helicopter crash in Germany. One of Farwell’s last acts as a soldier was to escort his brother’s body home to be buried in eastern Idaho, close to his wife’s family. He separated from the Army shortly after, without any plan for what to do next. “Four and a half years in the Army, including 16 months as an infantryman in eastern Afghanistan, provided plenty of skills with no legal application in the civilian world,” Farwell wrote in 2011 for the At War blog. “It was, however, wonderful preparation for being homeless.” He tried college but dropped out of two different schools. He spent time in a mental hospital. He drifted to California, where he ran out of money, all while trying to hide from the “ugliness of violent, unpredictable death” he had experienced during his deployment.

 

Over time Farwell’s unrelenting infatuation with Bergdahl’s story helped to propel him out of his own self-destruction. He worked on a profile of Bergdahl with Michael Hastings that was published in Rolling Stone in June 2012. Two years later Bergdahl became the linchpin of an American foreign-policy decision after he was released in a prisoner exchange negotiated by the Obama administration, which traded him for five Taliban detainees being held at Guantánamo Bay. The media coverage of the prisoner swap turned the soldier into a household name. Bergdahl morphed into a singular figure onto which Americans projected their resentment of the never-ending war in Afghanistan. He had abandoned his fellow soldiers. The Army’s search for him had put people at unnecessary risk, and at least three service members were wounded during attempted rescue missions. Why were we negotiating with terrorists to get him back in the first place? Even Donald Trump publicly voiced his opinion of Bergdahl during his election campaign, calling Bergdahl a “dirty rotten traitor.” The denunciations “fed into the worst instincts of the military, the media and the public,” says Farwell, who was disgusted by the response, but also motivated to get the story right. ..

Anonymous ID: a0fe8c Sept. 8, 2021, 8:07 p.m. No.96182   🗄️.is đź”—kun

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9959861/Colorado-proposing-new-electoral-map-oust-Trump-ally-Lauren-Boebert-Congress.html

 

.. Boebert, a staunch Trump ally and 2nd Amendment defender, was elected to Congress in November 2020 to represent Colorado's 3rd Congressional District.

 

Neguse, 37, who has served in Congress since 2019, was among the House Democrats who helped manage the second impeachment of former President Donald Trump.

 

The Democrat also immediately began using the proposed redistricting map as a donation push as the potential grows for him to run against Boebert.

 

'So, if the redistricting map released tonight holds, looks like I may be running for re-election against . . . Lauren Boebert,' Neguse tweeted Friday along with a link to donate to his campaign with the prompt: 'Join our team today'. ..