Anonymous ID: 1cf7c2 Dec. 26, 2020, 3:45 p.m. No.12188265   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8376

>>12188203

One of the things that strikes me odd about this News being found on this HVAC website is that I happened upon Dunham-Bush HVAC company yesterday when looking for a Bush Obama Familial connection. They have Factories in China and Germany (the servers?) They are in the UK. They have even done the HVAC for THIS.

Anonymous ID: 1cf7c2 Dec. 28, 2020, 4:43 p.m. No.12215752   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5787 >>5925

>>12213415

Podestà (pronounced [podeˈsta], English: Potestate, Podesta) was the name given to the holder of the highest civil office in the government of the cities of Central and Northern Italy during the Late Middle Ages. Sometimes, it meant the chief magistrate of a city state, the counterpart to similar positions in other cities that went by other names, e.g. rettori ("rectors").

Anonymous ID: 1cf7c2 Dec. 28, 2020, 4:46 p.m. No.12215787   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>12215752

Forgot this:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podest%C3%A0

 

The first documented usage of podestà was in Bologna in 1151, when it was applied to Guido di Ranieri di Sasso of Canossa, brought in from Faenza to be rettore e podestà, noted in numerous documents.[3] Leander Albertus gives the particulars:

 

"The citizens, seeing that there often arose among them quarrels and altercations, whether from favoritism or friendship, from envy or hatred that one had against another, by which their republic suffered great harm, loss and detriment; therefore, they decided, after much deliberation, to provide against these disorders. And thus they began to create a man of foreign birth their chief magistrate, giving him every power, authority and jurisdiction over the city, as well over criminal as over civil causes, and in times of war as well as in times of peace, calling him praetor as being above the others, or podestà., as having every authority and power over the city."