Anonymous ID: 4fc00a Feb. 28, 2021, 8:19 a.m. No.13069061   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The teaser Hook, is different than the title of the article, but seemed like Comms. American Dream Dead.

 

Example of the American Dream Dies of Virus at age 40

 

Remembering the lives lost to COVID-19: Juan Ordoñez, 40, of North Arlington, N.J

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/remembering-the-lives-lost-to-covid-19-juan-ordonez-40-of-north-arlington-nj-150913524.html

Anonymous ID: 4fc00a Feb. 28, 2021, 8:42 a.m. No.13069228   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13069201

Yeah, many done with the Doom shit.

Moar than done with the Whining too. Saw a lot of that shit from previous speakers as well. Seen FOUR years of it, ENOUGH!

Quickest way to lose interest.

Anonymous ID: 4fc00a Feb. 28, 2021, 9:20 a.m. No.13069435   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The mystery of India’s ‘lake of skeletons’

 

High in the Indian Himalayas, a remote lake nestled in a snowy valley is strewn with hundreds of human skeletons.

 

Roopkund Lake is located 5,029 metres (16,500ft) above sea level at the bottom of a steep slope on Trisul, one of India's highest mountains, in the state of Uttarakhand.

 

The remains are strewn around and beneath the ice at the "lake of skeletons", discovered by a patrolling British forest ranger in 1942.

 

Depending on the season and weather, the lake, which remains frozen for most of the year, expands and shrinks. Only when the snow melts are the skeletons visible, sometimes with flesh attached and well preserved. To date, the skeletal remains of an estimated 600-800 people have been found here. In tourism promotions, the local government describes it as a "mystery lake".

 

For more than half-a-century anthropologists and scientists have studied the remains and puzzled over a host of questions.

 

Who were these people? When did they die? How did they die? Where did they come from?

 

One old theory associates the remains to an Indian king, his wife and their attendants, all of whom perished in a blizzard some 870 years ago.

 

They found that the dead were both genetically diverse and their deaths were separated in time by as much as 1,000 years.

 

"It upends any explanations that involved a single catastrophic event that lead to their deaths," Eadaoin Harney, the lead author of the study, and a doctoral student at Harvard University, told me. "It is still not clear what happened at Roopkund Lake, but we can now be certain that the deaths of these individuals cannot be explained by a single event."

 

But more interestingly, the genetics study found the dead comprised a diverse people: one group of people had genetics similar to present-day people who live in South Asia, while the other "closely related" to people living in present-day Europe, particularly those living in the Greek island of Crete.

 

Also, the people who came from South Asia "do not appear to come from the same population".

 

"Some of them have ancestry that would be more common in groups from the north of the subcontinent, while others have ancestry that would be more common from more southern groups," says Ms Harney.

 

So did these diverse groups of people travel to the lake in smaller batches over a period of a few hundred years? Did some of them die during a single event?

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/mystery-india-lake-skeletons-005136821.html

Anonymous ID: 4fc00a Feb. 28, 2021, 9:54 a.m. No.13069629   🗄️.is 🔗kun

In Statehouses, Stolen-Election Myth Fuels a GOP Drive to Rewrite Rules

 

WASHINGTON — Led by loyalists who embrace former President Donald Trump’s baseless claims of a stolen election, Republicans in state legislatures nationwide are mounting extraordinary efforts to change the rules of voting and representation — and enhance their own political clout.

 

At the top of those efforts is a slew of bills raising new barriers to casting votes, particularly the mail ballots that Democrats flocked to in the 2020 election. But other measures go well beyond that, including tweaking Electoral College and judicial election rules for the benefit of Republicans; clamping down on citizen-led ballot initiatives; and outlawing private donations that provide resources for administering elections, which were crucial to the smooth November vote.

 

And although the decennial redrawing of political maps has been pushed to the fall because of delays in delivering 2020 census totals, there are already signs of an aggressive drive to further gerrymander political districts, particularly in states under complete Republican control.

 

The national Republican Party joined the movement this past 13069632" onclick="highlightReply(13069632, event)" href="/qresearch/res/13068959.html#13069632">No.13069632

>>13069594

And when she got to DC,

she said that she couldn't afford the rent . . .