Anonymous ID: 886671 Oct. 14, 2020, 5:55 a.m. No.11065104   🗄️.is 🔗kun

This keeps showing up on my homepage as an ad. It has a short, sped up video showing this whole head mask for Halloween, that seems more like Comms now, than an Advertisement. Looks so real. If what we see is only on Video, or TV etc. who's to say it's really the person we are looking at, and not a MASK.

 

https://shoplarage1.com/products/another-me-the-elder-mask

Anonymous ID: 886671 Oct. 14, 2020, 6:04 a.m. No.11065190   🗄️.is 🔗kun

‘No Christian could vote Democrat’: Inside the most Republican county in America

 

In parts of Appalachia, the pace of change can now be measured by the whizz of a high-speed internet connection.

 

For many years, swathes of eastern Kentucky suffered many of the deprivations of being disconnected from the wider world - poor health, poverty and few opportunities.

 

In the last few years, high speed internet, and with it the chance to tele-commute, has had a transformational impact

 

And yet in Jackson County, 60 miles southeast of Lexington, some things have not budged. This county of 13,000 people has voted Republican since the US Civil War, and it is hugely enamoured by the current Republican president, Donald Trump, and Kentucky senator Mitch McConnell.

 

In 2016, Jackson County, which has just one small town, McKee, which is “wet“ whereas the rest of the county is “dry”, went for Mr Trump 88 per cent. Every indication is that it will do so again.

 

“You won’t find many Democrats up here,” said Anthony Brody, 65, sitting in his truck outside a Walgreens pharmacy.

 

A woman seated alongside him, Connie Ray, said she too would be voting for Mr Trump and Mr McConnell. She said Democrats wanted to “kill little babies”.

 

Nearby, just about to leave the parking lot, Tricia Lewis and Bunny Tilley, were similarly adamant. They liked Mr Trump “because everyone else hates him” and thought Mr McConnell had done a lot to help miners in the area who had lost their jobs as the industry declined.

 

Was it not time for a change, given he had already served six terms. What about his challenger, Amy McGrath?

 

“She should be at home looking after her children,” claimed Ms Tilley.

 

When it was pointed out the 45-year-old Ms McGrath had been a fighter plot for the US Marines and the first woman to fly a combat mission for the Corps, she said: “That doesn’t matter.”

 

Some in Jackson County, located in the Daniel Boone National Forest, currently lit orange with the colours of autumn, said they were not opposed voting for a Democrat per se.

 

But Mary Gabbard admitted the last time she voted for a Democrat was for Jimmy Carter in 1976, and suggested it was because “Jimmy” also went to church.

 

“The Democrats are for everything the bible is against, and I don’t feel any Christian could vote Democrat,” said the 74-year-old. “They are for abortions, killing little babies, they are for the homosexual-gay rights. They’re just for for everything that the bible is against.”

 

Her husband, 83-year-old Bobby Gabbard, a friendly man who was happy enough to pose for a photograph in front of the large Republican banner set in his lawn, said he never voted for a Democrat.

 

Asked if they would be watching the vice presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Mike Pence, himself an outspoken conservative Christian, they said they would be going to church instead.Ten miles away, in the community of Ammville, Brian Bales said he had once been Democrat and twice voted for Barack Obama. He said Mr Obama campaigned as a “real statesman” though he thought his presidency had brought little meaningful change.

 

Now, he said, the Democratic Party no longer stood for the interests of working people. He voted for Donald Trump in 2016 and will do so again.

 

“He’s a businessman. We need a businessman in charge,” he said.

 

A number or organisations in the half-dozen states that include part of the Appalachians have worked to present a more complete and nuanced context of the mountains and their residents. Most of the time they appear in the news is it in stories associated with poverty, opioid addiction and black lung disease.

 

And those issues remain very real. A report published last year by USA Today suggested that ten of the worst 25 counties to live in in the US in terms of life expectancy, the number of people with a bachelors degree and the poverty rate, were located in Kentucky. Among them was Jackson County, which has a poverty rate of 33 per cent, and where “Gabbard” is a common surname.

 

Carla Gabbard, 46, said she thought the mountains were changing, and gave credit to the high-speed internet connection, work on which started five years ago. She said she worked for a non-profit organisation that recruited and trained people in places such as Jackson County, to work from home for national companies.

 

She said she believed that for many years, the people of Appalachia had suffered from a discriminatory view that saw them as lazy and backwards.

 

“People here want to work,” she said. “But it has only been the last five or six years that they have had these opportunities”

 

She said she had not decided who she would be voting for this year and said she intended to watch the vice presidential debate to help make up her mind.

 

More

https://www.yahoo.com/news/no-christian-could-vote-democrat-103908119.html

Anonymous ID: 886671 Oct. 14, 2020, 6:40 a.m. No.11065533   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11065466

This is so tiring.

It's old, and those that believe it, will eat it up. And yet, those who know the D's sick moves, are continually dragged across jagged glass, while we are forced to wait it out, being dismissed "Conspiracy Theorists," because there are too many inside traitors, helping bury the truth.