Anonymous ID: 9c7dfb July 29, 2020, 12:53 p.m. No.10116861   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7323 >>7449

Zuckerburg's, statement regarding HCQ is obfuscation, as HCQ can not be purchased over the counter. So in this instance, this disallows an individual access to information that could facilitate a conversation between Dr. & Patient. Prime example of censoring.

 

A simple disclosure of check with your Dr. before taking advice would suffice.

Anonymous ID: 9c7dfb July 29, 2020, 1:33 p.m. No.10117249   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Shark that killed NYC woman confirmed as great white – and it’s still out there

 

The shark that killed a former New York City fashion executive off the coast of Maine was a great white — and it’s still out there, officials said Tuesday. Victim Julie Dimperio Holowach, 63 — who retired as president of the handbag company Kipling North America — was swimming with her daughter about 20 yards off Bailey Island around 3:30 p.m. Monday when she was attacked by the beast — which left behind a fragment of tooth that allowed scientists to identify it as a great white, Maine officials said. A witness said he saw the horrific scene — Maine’s first fatal shark attack — unfold from his second-story office in a building overlooking the island’s Mackerel Cove. Holowach was in a black wet suit, while the younger woman was in a blue one-piece, as the pair started swimming out while laughing and enjoying the water, office worker Tom Whyte told The Boston Globe.

 

The victim then dipped under the water and started flailing her arms, Whyte said. The woman with Holowach saw her surface for a moment — and then the woman began swimming back to shore, where she collapsed to her hands and knees on the sand and screamed for help, the witness said. He said neighors ran to the woman’s aid, and the US Coast Guard soon launched a boat to try to rescue Holowach. Meanwhile, at least one kayaker rushed to try to help Holowach in the water but became distraught and was unable to help, Whyte said. The witness said Holowach floated to shore, where she was immediately pronounced dead by arriving paramedics. “It’s all very surreal,” Whyte told the paper. Holowach was likely mistaken for a seal because of her wetsuit, Maine officials said at a press conference Tuesday. The shark that killed her has yet to be seen again, they added — warning local swimmers and paddle-boarders to steer clear of areas of water where seals and schools of fish are, since they are prime bait for sharks.

 

“It’s the presence of seals that are really the drive here,” said Maine Marine Patrol Commissioner Patrick Keliher. “We are aware that there have been a few reports of seals in the area who have had bite marks.” A relative and pal told The Post that if anyone could have fought off the beast, it was Holowach. “She used to swim out there every day. She was like an Olympic-status swimmer. She was an incredible athlete,’’ said her cousin, Steve Morano. The kin said Holowach, who grew up in the Morris Park section of The Bronx, “loved the beach. “I am shocked. I just can’t believe it. … We’re devastated,’’ he said. “It’s so bizarre. It’s like out of a movie.’’ Holowach’s longtime friend, Karen Murray, said the victim was a strong triathlete — who had retired to spend more time with her family and enjoy life.

 

Holowach’s Linkedin page says she was a board member of Sea Bags LLC, a company that offers handmade totes with nautical themes, as well as president at Kipling. Seabags CEO Don Oakes said in a statement that Holowach’s “passion for the ocean, the state of Maine and causes we believe in made her an invaluable supporter and friend,” according to the Bangor Daily News in Maine. Holowach’s Facebook page says she attended the Fashion Institute of Technology in Manhattan. Maine officials said she was from New York City, and records show she has previously lived in Chelsea in Manhattan, as well as the Westchester County communities of Briarcliff Manor and Ardsley. Holowach and her husband also have a home in Naples, Fla. — and have lived on Elden Point Road on Bailey Island, records show. Maine officials said Holowach was a beloved member of the area’s community, where she and her husband had a summer home and would spend four to five a months a year. “Julie and her husband are well-known, very respected individuals,” said Maine Marine Patrol Maj. Robert Beal. “The community … is trying to process yesterday’s event.” Meanwhile, two shark sightings Monday off the coast of Long Island prompted some local beaches to be at least temporarily closed to swimming.

https://nypost.com/2020/07/28/shark-that-killed-nyc-woman-in-maine-confirmed-as-a-great-white/

Anonymous ID: 9c7dfb July 29, 2020, 1:58 p.m. No.10117523   🗄️.is 🔗kun

British family finds illegal migrants hidden in rooftop cargo box

 

A vacationing British family found two young migrants hiding in a storage box atop their car. The 2-minute clip, posted Tuesday on Twitter, shows the moment a British family made the startling find as they stopped at a gas station in Normandy, France. “Oh my f–king God, two people,” one woman says as one of the stowaways emerged. “Oh my f–king God.” A man then launched into a expletive-laced tirade as the migrant hopped off his car, knocking out what appeared to be a laptop computer, video shows. “What the f–k are you doing, you f–king t–t?!” the man yells. “You’ve could’ve broken this, you c–t. F–king get out of my sight. Where’s all our stuff?!”

 

The pair of migrants – identified as two 16-year-olds from Eritrea and Guinea, according to France’s The Local – then start to walk away as the family demands they empty their pockets while taking stock of their belongings, video shows. “Where’s our stuff?” one young man asks before a woman in the family says that there’s “nothing there” in the storage box where they were just found. The young migrants then disappeared into nearby shrubs along the highway, video shows. The family later told police as they filed a theft complaint that they stayed in Calais, France, the night before and suspect that’s where the two migrant teens got into their car, believing they were headed to the UK based on their British plates, The Local reports. The migrants were later taken into custody by police, but they were released after prosecutors in Dieppe issued a care order and social services refused to take them, The Local reports, citing French media outlets.

 

Hmm..disturbing.