Anonymous ID: 483606 Nov. 27, 2020, 2:37 p.m. No.11810943   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>11810889

The Law of One

A series of over 100 meditative channeling sessions basically claiming the same, that in the end, we are all one, tiny sparks of the creator. trillions of sparks spread throughout the universe all having different experiences and bringing those experiences back to the Creator.

Anonymous ID: 483606 Nov. 27, 2020, 2:40 p.m. No.11810974   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Extraordinary rendition

 

Extraordinary rendition, also called irregular rendition or forced rendition, is the government-sponsored abduction and extrajudicial transfer of a person from one country to another with the purpose of circumventing the former country's laws on interrogation, detention and torture. Recent renditions have been carried out (for example) by the United States government.[1][2][3]

 

The first known foreign rendition by the US was that of airline-hijacker Fawaz Younis, lured on a yacht off the coast of Cyprus in September 1987, taken to international waters, abducted, and brought to the U.S. for trial, on President Ronald Reagan's authorization.[4] President Bill Clinton authorized extraordinary rendition to nations known to practice interrogation, which was called in 2011 by opinion columnist Marc Thiessen "torture by proxy".[5] The administration of President George W. Bush rendered hundreds of "illegal combatants" for US detention, and transported detainees to US-controlled sites as part of an extensive interrogation program that included torture.[6] Extraordinary rendition continued under the Obama administration, with targets being interrogated and subsequently taken to the US for trial.[7] A 2018 report by the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament found the United Kingdom, specifically the MI5 and MI6, to be complicit in many of the renditions done by the US, having helped fund them, supplying them with intelligence and knowingly allowing them to happen.[8]

 

The United Nations considers one nation abducting the citizens of another a crime against humanity.[9] In July 2014 the European Court of Human Rights condemned the government of Poland for participating in CIA extraordinary rendition, ordering Poland to pay restitution to men who had been abducted, taken to a CIA black site in Poland, and tortured.[10][11][12]

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extraordinary_rendition