Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:25 p.m. No.13034522   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4556

>>13034516

>Interdasting that the coffee shop below Dominions headquarters in Toronto is a location where the TV series Suits was filmed. Ties it back into the ‘ British Royal Family’ as Meghan Markle was known for her role in that series.

 

Why did she and Harry really move to the US?

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:31 p.m. No.13034556   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4599 >>4612 >>4616 >>4713 >>4793

>>13034522

>>13034516

 

Tiger car crash (not going with the rules) he got Freedom medal from Trump almost dead

Rush Limbaugh got medal of freedom Trump now dead

and

Harry's mom princess Diana was killed in a car crash (not going with the rules?)

 

all PB

 

car crashes dominion celebs

 

>>13033235 <<<< very interdasting stuff here

>>13033156

 

>>13033156

>>13033164 <<<<<<<<<<<

>>13033192

>>13033208

>>13033235

>>13033707

 

>Tiger crashed near intersection of Blackhorse Rd.

 

Logo on vehicle reminded me of dig we did on Nov 18, 2020 about election being stolen and Dominion’s headquarters being located aboveBlackhorse Cafein Toronto.

 

He is an old post:

 

>The entire outcome of the US ELECTIONS is decided by a company upstairs from this expresso bar.

 

>>11690848 Pb

 

>Interesting is that the series SUITS was also there for filming.

 

>https://torontoist.com/2015/08/reel-toronto-suits-season-4-part-two/

 

>>11690870 Pb

 

Interdasting that the coffee shop below Dominions headquarters in Toronto is a location where the TV series Suits was filmed. Ties it back into the ‘ British Royal Family’ as Meghan Markle was known for her role in that series.

 

Why did she and Harry really move to the US?

 

https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1620783/

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:40 p.m. No.13034616   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4669 >>4695 >>4738 >>4858 >>4890

>>13034556

when celebs die or have weird shit happen that the world pays attention to:

 

my post is just me thinking out loud

so any fake media that tries to say what i post

is what Qanons as they call us

''' think and is a Q post, YOU are wrong, this is just a random anon shitposting

so if someone tries to do a fake story that Rush is alive and we spread it, you can save this post and call them out as fake fucks with zero comprehension

 

MY wondering/shitposting:

 

Cabal takes out huge voice for al things conservative and Trump?

Rush? Poisoned to look like lung cancer?

Really alive?

Gtting right to try medicine without Biden admin aware to stop the use of un-approved meds?

 

How great if later exposed that Rush was really a goner, but secret advances in medicine are a real thing, good guys have Rush, whether poisoned or lung cancer, survives biblically, to paint very vividly that people die in USA (world) needlessly as hidden cures exist.

 

How great would that movie be.

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:48 p.m. No.13034669   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4671 >>4677 >>4679 >>4713

>>13034616

 

life is weird

all events and people and names and timelines intersect

 

Trump and the past and the present and the future

things i read stand out

names and events

 

 

rush conway cabal

 

The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777 by John Trumbull, Dr. Benjamin Rush and General George Washington enter from the background, with Captain William Leslie, shown on the right, mortally wounded

 

'nothing new under the sun

 

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

 

Benjamin Rush

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Benjamin Rush

Benjamin Rush Painting by Peale.jpg

Portrait by Charles Willson Peale, circa 1818

Born December 24, 1745

Byberry, Philadelphia County, Province of Pennsylvania, British America

Died April 19, 1813 (aged 67)

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America

Resting place Christ Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia

Alma mater Princeton University

University of Edinburgh

Occupation Physician, writer, educator, medical doctor

Known for Signer of the United States Declaration of Independence

Children 13, including Richard

Signature

Benjamin Rush signature.png

Benjamin Rush (January 4, 1746 [O.S. December 24, 1745] – April 19, 1813) was a signer of the United States Declaration of Independence and a civic leader in Philadelphia, where he was a physician, politician, social reformer, humanitarian, and educator and the founder of Dickinson College. Rush attended the Continental Congress.[1] His later self-description there was: "He aimed right."[2][3] He served as Surgeon General of the Continental Army and became a professor of chemistry, medical theory, and clinical practice at the University of Pennsylvania.[4]

 

Rush was a leader of the American Enlightenment and an enthusiastic supporter of the American Revolution. He was a leader in Pennsylvania's ratification of the Constitution in 1788. He was prominent in many reforms, especially in the areas of medicine and education. He opposed slavery, advocated free public schools, and sought improved education for women, and a more enlightened penal system. As a leading physician, Rush had a major impact on the emerging medical profession. As an Enlightenment intellectual, he was committed to organizing all medical knowledge around explanatory theories, rather than rely on empirical methods. Rush argued that illness was the result of imbalances in the body's physical system and was caused by malfunctions in the brain. His approach prepared the way for later medical research, but Rush himself undertook none of it. He promoted public health by advocating clean environment and stressing the importance of personal and military hygiene. His study of mental disorder made him one of the founders of American psychiatry.[5] In 1965 the American Psychiatric Association recognized Rush as the "father of American psychiatry".[6]

 

in 1769, Rush opened a medical practice in Philadelphia and became Professor of Chemistry at the College of Philadelphia.[14] After his election to the revived American Philosophical Society in 1768, Rush served as the Society's Curator from 1770 to 1773, as Secretary from 1773 to 1773, and finally Vice President of the Society from 1797 to 1801.[15] Rush ultimately published the first American textbook on chemistry and several volumes on medical student education, and wrote influential patriotic essays.[13]

 

Revolutionary period

Rush was active in the Sons of Liberty and was elected to attend the provincial conference to send delegates to the Continental Congress. Thomas Paine consulted Rush when writing the profoundly influential pro-independence pamphlet Common Sense. Starting in 1776 Rush represented Pennsylvania and signed the Declaration of Independence.[1] He also represented Philadelphia at Pennsylvania's own Constitutional Convention.[1]

 

cont:

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:48 p.m. No.13034671   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4713

>>13034669

cont:

 

The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777 by John Trumbull, Dr. Benjamin Rush and General George Washington enter from the background, with Captain William Leslie, shown on the right, mortally wounded

While Rush was representing Pennsylvania in the Continental Congress (and serving on its Medical Committee), he also used his medical skills in the field. Rush accompanied the Philadelphia militia during the battles after which the British occupied Philadelphia and most of New Jersey. He was depicted serving in the Battle of Princeton in the painting The Death of General Mercer at the Battle of Princeton, January 3, 1777 by the American artist John Trumbull.[16]

 

The Army Medical Service was in disarray, between the military casualties, extremely high losses due to typhoid, yellow fever and other camp illnesses, political conflicts between Dr. John Morgan and Dr. William Shippen, Jr., and inadequate supplies and guidance from the Medical Committee.[17]:29–43, 65–92 Nonetheless, Rush accepted an appointment as surgeon-general of the middle department of the Continental Army. Rush's order "Directions for preserving the health of soldiers" became one of the foundations of preventive military medicine and was repeatedly republished, including as late as 1908.[18][19]:36–41 However, Rush's reporting of Dr. Shippen's misappropriation of food and wine supplies intended to comfort hospitalized soldiers, under-reporting of patient deaths, and failure to visit the hospitals under his command, ultimately led to Rush's resignation in 1778.

 

Controversy

Rush criticized General George Washington in two handwritten but unsigned letters while still serving under the Surgeon General. One, to Virginia Governor Patrick Henry dated October 12, 1778, quoted General Thomas Conway saying that if not for God's grace the ongoing war would have been lost by Washington and his weak counselors. Henry forwarded the letter to Washington, despite Rush's request that the criticism be conveyed orally, and Washington recognized the handwriting. At the time, the supposed –Conway Cabal'' was reportedly trying to replace Washington with Horatio Gates as commander-in-chief.[13]:133–34 Rush's letter relayed General John Sullivan's criticism that forces directly under Washington were undisciplined and mob-like, and contrasted Gates' army as "a well-regulated family".[20]:212–215 Ten days later, Rush wrote to John Adams relaying complaints inside Washington's army, including about "bad bread, no order, universal disgust" and praising Conway, who had been appointed to Inspector General.[13]:136–37

 

Dr. Shippen sought Rush's resignation and received it by the end of the month after Continental Congress delegate John Witherspoon, chairman of a committee to investigate Morgan's and Rush's charges of misappropriation and mismanagement against Shippen, told Rush his complaints would not produce reform.[12]:219–20 Rush later expressed regret for his gossip against Washington. In a letter to John Adams in 1812, Rush wrote, "He [Washington] was the highly favored instrument whose patriotism and name contributed greatly to the establishment of the independence of the United States." Rush also successfully pleaded with Washington's biographers Justice Bushrod Washington and Chief Justice John Marshall to delete his association with those stinging words.[13

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:54 p.m. No.13034713   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4738

 

weird, right

 

the two Rush's

 

Rush Limbaugh and Benjamin Rush

 

 

>>13034556

>>13034679 BOTH of the Rush's can have the same description

>>13034669

>>13034671

>>13034677 BOTH

>>13034679

>>13034669

> Rush ultimately published the first American textbook on chemistry and several volumes on medical student education, and wrote influential patriotic essays.[13]

 

>Revolutionary period

 

>Rush was active in the Sons of Liberty and was elected to attend the provincial conference to send delegates to the Continental Congress. Thomas Paine consulted Rush when writing the profoundly influential pro-independence pamphlet Common Sense. Starting in 1776 Rush represented Pennsylvania and signed the Declaration of Independence.[1] He also represented Philadelphia at Pennsylvania's own Constitutional Convention.[1]

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 4:58 p.m. No.13034738   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4762 >>4792

>>13034713

>>13034616 my weird thinking out loud

 

AND

 

wow

talk about hidden medicine:

 

LOOK AT THIS

 

In 1792, Rush read a paper before the American Philosophical Society which argued that the "color" and "figure" of blacks were derived from a form of leprosy.

 

He argued that with proper treatment, blacks could be cured and become white.[31]'''

 

 

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

 

In 1766, when Rush set out for his studies in Edinburgh, he was outraged by the sight of 100 slave ships in Liverpool harbor. As a prominent Presbyterian doctor and professor of chemistry in Philadelphia, he provided a bold and respected voice against the slave trade.[28]

 

He warmly praised the ministry of "Black Harry" Hosier, the freedman circuit rider who accompanied Bishop Francis Asbury during the establishment of the Methodist Church in America,[29] but the highlight of his involvement was the pamphlet he wrote in 1773 entitled "An Address to the Inhabitants of the British Settlements in America, upon Slave-Keeping." In this first of his many attacks on the social evils of his day, he assailed the slave trade as well as the entire institution of slavery. Rush argued scientifically that Negroes were not by nature intellectually or morally inferior. Any apparent evidence to the contrary was only the perverted expression of slavery, which "is so foreign to the human mind, that the moral faculties, as well as those of the understanding are debased, and rendered torpid by it."[30]

 

In 1792, Rush read a paper before the American Philosophical Society which argued that the "color" and "figure" of blacks were derived from a form of leprosy.

 

He argued that with proper treatment, blacks could be cured and become white.[31]'''

 

Despite his public condemnations of slavery, Rush purchased a slave named William Grubber in 1776. To the consternation of many, Rush still owned Grubber when he joined the Pennsylvania Abolition Society in 1784.[32]

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:01 p.m. No.13034762   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4792

>>13034738

>1773 entitled "An Address to the Inhabitants of the British Settlements in America, upon Slave-Keeping."

 

https://library.villanova.edu/Find/Record/852296/Description

Subjects:

Slavery.

Slavery United States > Controversial literature.

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:06 p.m. No.13034792   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4817

>>13034762

>>13034738

 

interesting thesis

 

A Shared Vision and Joint Venture:

Benjamin Rush,''' Richard Allen, and the Free Black

Community of Philadelphia, 1787-1813

 

Microsoft Word - clint rodreick's thesis.doc

https://www.pacificu.edu/sites/default/files/documents/Clint%20Rodreick.pdf

 

 

Clint Rodreick

Senior Thesis, 2006

2

Introduction:

Post-Revolutionary Philadelphia was a testing ground for what would then have

been perceived as racial experimentation. With Pennsylvania having passed the first

gradual emancipation act in the United States in 1780, Philadelphia would soon house the

largest urban free black population in the country.1

As a city of refuge in a land of

oppression, Philadelphia was seen by blacks as a beacon of light in a land of darkness.

Manumitted slaves, free blacks, and runaway slaves all flocked to Philadelphia in the

hope of starting a new life, one characterized by liberty, security, and opportunity.

Philadelphia’s allure and progressive racial attitude had the effect of placing the city on a

pedestal for the entire nation to watch. '''If blacks failed to adapt to their life of freedom,

then proslavery advocates would use it as incriminating evidence of innate racial

inferiority and black incapability; slavery would become more defensible, and antislavery

advocates would be exposed as delusional and maniacal. If the “Philadelphia

experiment”2'''

was to succeed however, and blacks were able to prove that they had what

it took to make it on their own, then the ideology behind American slavery would be

severely undermined. Slavery would no longer find justification based on the color of

one’s skin. Truly, the fate of black America and the nature of American race relations

hung in the balance. Although the future of black America was by no means guaranteed

freedom if the experiment proved successful, it most assuredly was guaranteed a more

deeply entrenched regime of slavery if the experiment were to fail. The repercussions

were by no means equitable; a lot was at stake for black America, and there was no

margin for error.

 

1

Gary Nash, Forging Freedom: The Formation of Philadelphia’s Free Black Community 1760-1820

(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1988).

2 Ibid. Nash is responsible for coining this phrase.

 

read entire: https://www.pacificu.edu/sites/default/files/documents/Clint%20Rodreick.pdf

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:09 p.m. No.13034817   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13034792

 

> Post-Revolutionary Philadelphia was a testing ground for what would then have been perceived as racial experimentation

 

> no margin for error.

 

Truly, the fate of black America and the nature of American race relations hung in the balance.

 

and here we are 2021

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:14 p.m. No.13034858   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4890 >>4974

>>13034616

>>13034830

>>13034695

 

and recently all the poisoning talk about that Russian dood Alexey Navalny : https://www.ladbible.com/news/latest-doctor-in-charge-of-treating-alexei-navalny-dies-unexpectedly-20210204

 

all just sits weird with me

the timing of all things

and topics

how they can merge

 

especially when considering how things would/could wake people up in a a shocking way

 

just thinking out loud

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:17 p.m. No.13034890   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13034858

 

poisoning, cures, deadly diseases, seem prevalent these days

"illness" or poison???

 

I think this way

 

Top Doctor In Charge Of

Healing

Russian Opposition Leader Dies ‘Very Unexpectedly’

Stewart Perrie

 

Published 22:51, 04 February 2021

 

A top doctor who was in charge of healing Russia's Opposition leader after being poisoned has died 'very unexpectedly'.

 

Sergey Maximishin was the deputy chief physician of the Omsk emergency hospital and was tasked with treating Alexei Navalny.

 

A statement from the hospital says: "With regret, we inform you that…the deputy chief physician for anaesthesiology and resuscitation of the emergency hospital №1, assistant of the department of Omsk State Medical University, PhD of medical sciences Maksimishin Sergey Valentinovich suddenly passed away."

 

Hospital colleague Maria Morozova, who saw him this week, said the death was 'very unexpected'.

 

The Daily Mail reports he died from a heart attack induced by high blood pressure.

Galina Nazarova, spokeswoman for Omsk Health Ministry, said there wasn't anything nefarious behind the man's death.

 

"He buried his parents this year. He died at work, in his intensive care unit, where he worked," she said. "He was in the hospital, he was placed in intensive care and he died there."

 

But Navalny's chief of staff, Leonid Volkov, has released a statement to CNN, questioning officials: "Sergey Maximishin was the head of department that treated Alexey Navalny and was in charge of his treatment - specifically his medically induced coma.

 

"[Maximishim] knew more than anyone else about Alexey's condition so I can't dismiss possibility of foul play.

 

"However Russia's health care system is very poor and it's not uncommon for doctors of his age to suddenly die. I doubt there will any investigation into his death."

 

Navalny was poisoned with what some in the West have said was a military grade nerve agent that was put into his underpants by state security agents.

 

He became sick while on a plane from Siberia to Moscow and the aircraft made an emergency landing in Omsk.

 

He was placed in an induced coma at the local hospital and Maximishin was in charge of 'guiding' his care.

 

Navalny was then evacuated to Germany for further treatment and it took him five months to recover from the poisoning.

 

He defiantly returned to Russia last month and was taken into custody. Navalny was sent to prison this week for two and a half years for violating probation terms of a previous sentence.

 

The Opposition leader has blamed his poisoning on Russian security services and on President Vladimir Putin.

 

Featured Image Credit: Omsk Health Ministry

 

 

>>13034616

>>13034830

>>13034695

Anonymous ID: 888b9c Feb. 23, 2021, 5:20 p.m. No.13034914   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4937

>>13034729

very little support of Q says who

 

you are so wrong

i speak with strangers daily

they are all getting on board with what is Q

 

it is just growing silently now that social media is comped