Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 5:35 a.m. No.13415534   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5584 >>5832 >>6062

>>13415473

Wizarding World

@wizardingworld

 

Louis Arthur Charles, you were named after three iconic Weasleys… #RoyalBabyName

 

Louis Arthur Charles, you were named after three iconic Weasleys…"

 

Charles (or Charlie) is one of Ron's oldest brothers, the one who went to study dragons in Romania.

 

And, as fans of the series are no doubt aware, Arthur was the name of Ron's father.

 

As for Louis? That was the name of Fleur and Bill's youngest son.

 

https://twitter.com/wizardingworld/status/989823788962533376

 

While this is fun, Prince Harry's name is mirror of Harry Potter. Just something spoopy 'bout the "Royals."

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 5:45 a.m. No.13415584   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5832 >>6062

>>13415534

https://www.insider.com/prince-harry-birthday-best-photos-from-every-year-2019-9#age-28-harry-the-duchess-of-cambridge-and-prince-william-play-with-wands-on-the-harry-potter-set-at-warner-bros-studios-in-leavesden-on-april-26-2013-35

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 6:06 a.m. No.13415628   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5795

History Repeating or Future proves Past?

 

Prince Harry’s lonely return home without Meghan is royal history repeating itself

 

His adored grandfather had died at a time of unprecedented familial discord, with the Royal Family still reeling from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s corrosive, finger-pointing Oprah Winfrey interview.

 

Prince Philip’s death may have prompted an outpouring of national gratitude and affection, but the question now is whether it can cement the deep fissures within the House of Windsor itself.

 

How will Harry be welcomed by Princes William and Charles, after accusing his family of racism? Not to mention following reports, via Gayle King, a US news anchor and friend of Meghan, that private telephone calls between the California-based prince and his father and brother had been “unproductive” - disclosures said to have gone down badly at the Palace.

 

That Harry had not seen his grandfather for more than a year, after he whisked his wife and son, Archie, to the other side of the world to escape being “trapped” by the monarchy, can only add to the Duke of Sussex’s inevitable feelings of wretchedness and grief. His sense of isolation will likely have been compounded by the fact that Meghan, heavily pregnant with their second child, hasn’t been able to accompany him.

 

The echoes of history here are uncanny as, nearly 70 years ago, a similar scenario played out.

 

Another once-beloved member of the Royal Family had to leave his American wife behind in the United States to make the solitary journey home for a royal funeral, where he had to face his frosty relations, saddened that he had quit monarchical life.

 

In 1952, when King George VI died, his brother Edward, the Duke of Windsor - exiled to France after the abdication - was staying in New York with his wife, Wallis Simpson.

 

Edward and Bertie’s relationship had been further strained by the antipathy between the royal sisters-in-law, Wallis and Queen Elizabeth, later the Queen Mother. Just as Meghan made clear in her Oprah confessional, her relationship with Kate Middleton has been far from sisterly and cosy.

 

The tragedy for Edward was that no rifts had been healed before the King died. While Harry has not seen his family for over a year, Edward had not seen his relatives for 15 years after he left Britain in 1936.

 

Just as one imagines poor Prince Harry receiving a jolting call in the middle of the night last Thursday at his Montecito mansion, telling him that the Duke of Edinburgh had died, the Windsors had that distressing phone conversation in their six-room apartment on the 28th floor of the Waldorf Towers on February 6 1952.

 

For the Duke of Windsor, it came as a stunning shock. Even though his rancour towards his family was - as Harry’s seems to be - mired in resentful fury that his wife had been mistreated, he was blindsided by the tragic news

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/prince-harry-lonely-return-home-165853314.html

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 6:11 a.m. No.13415644   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5651 >>5726

Anthony Fauci Has Worn Out His Welcome

 

More than a year ago, Americans welcomed Anthony Fauci into their homes as a sober scientist who was helping them make sense of a deadly new virus. But he has worn out that welcome.

 

It’s true that Fauci has enjoyed an illustrious career, advising every president since Ronald Reagan and winning the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2008. There’s much to admire in his overall leadership since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, as director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, he has a serious job that’s not supposed to involve being a media spokesman so ubiquitous that it’s hard to believe he ever turns down any media requests.

 

As he’s maintained a media schedule worthy of a serious presidential candidate or an actor in a new major studio release, Fauci has gradually stopped standing apart from the contentious debate about the pandemic, lockdowns, restrictions, precautions, and what is safe and what is risky. Instead, he has become part of the acrimony, offering murky and sometimes contradictory recommendations. This goes well beyond his initially discouraging the use of masks in January and February 2020, like most U.S. public health officials, or his mid-March 2020 reassurance: “The guidelines are a 15-day trial guideline to be reconsidering. It isn’t that these guidelines are now going to be in effect until July.”

 

Fauci doesn’t write or establish the quarantine policies being enforced by cities and states; he can only advise other people in and out of government. But his voice carries a lot of weight, and, more or less willingly, he has become the face of America’s quarantine policies. Frustratingly, his perspective always seem to be that the right time to open up is another six weeks from now, no matter how low caseloads get or how much the national vaccination program accelerates.

 

And it’s hard to shake the sense that Fauci makes recommendations based on how he thinks people will react. Fauci admitted in December that he had changed his assessments about herd immunity, based on what he thought the public could handle hearing. In the pandemic’s early days, Fauci tended to cite the same 60 to 70 percent estimate that most experts did, but Fauci gradually boosted it to 85 percent. In an interview with the New York Times’ Donald McNeil Jr., Fauci “acknowledged that he had slowly but deliberately been moving the goal posts. He is doing so, he said, partly based on new science, and partly on his gut feeling that the country is finally ready to hear what he really thinks.”

 

At the beginning of March, Fauci forcefully criticized the state of Texas for ending its statewide mask mandate, declaring, “It’s risky and could set us back to a place that’s even worse than where we are now . . . and lead to additional surges.” And yet, Texas has seen its caseload continue to decline. When asked about the lack of an increase in that state, he answered, “You know, there are a lot of things that go into that. I mean, when you say that they’ve had a lot of the activity on the outside like ball games, I’m not really quite sure. It could be they’re doing things outdoors.”

 

Earlier this month, after GOP lawmakers asked Fauci about the risk of outbreaks in migrant detention facilities, he said, “I have nothing to do with the border. . . . Having me down at the border, that’s really not what I do.” Except Fauci has weighed in on travel restrictions and border closures plenty of times in the past year. It’s self-evidently obvious that having lots of migrants of all ages cramped into detention facilities is a formula for a rapid spread of the virus. Fauci just didn’t want to criticize the Biden administration, so he dodged the question.

 

But perhaps most frustrating is Fauci’s recent comments suggesting that getting vaccinated doesn’t alter the risk of catching COVID-19 much and can’t justify changes in behavior. Fauci said that even though he’s vaccinated, he still won’t eat indoors at a restaurant, go to a movie theater, or “go into an indoor, crowded place where people are not wearing masks.” He said he still won’t be traveling, either.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/anthony-fauci-worn-welcome-103044751.html

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 6:37 a.m. No.13415783   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>13415742

Nah, they've all been diddling with mRNA for years.

 

Oct. 14, 2012

 

B12 cofactors directly stabilize an mRNA regulatory switch

James E Johnson Jr 1, Francis E Reyes, Jacob T Polaski, Robert T Batey

 

Abstract

Structures of riboswitch receptor domains bound to their effector have shown how messenger RNAs recognize diverse small molecules, but mechanistic details linking the structures to the regulation of gene expression remain elusive. To address this, here we solve crystal structures of two different classes of cobalamin (vitamin B(12))-binding riboswitches that include the structural switch of the downstream regulatory domain. These classes share a common cobalamin-binding core, but use distinct peripheral extensions to recognize different B(12) derivatives. In each case, recognition is accomplished through shape complementarity between the RNA and cobalamin, with relatively few hydrogen bonding interactions that typically govern RNA-small molecule recognition. We show that a composite cobalamin-RNA scaffold stabilizes an unusual long-range intramolecular kissing-loop interaction that controls mRNA expression. This is the first, to our knowledge, riboswitch crystal structure detailing how the receptor and regulatory domains communicate in a ligand-dependent fashion to regulate mRNA expression.

 

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/23064232/

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 7:19 a.m. No.13415963   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5980

Harry Potter Spoopery.

 

Matthew Lewis says Alan Rickman took him aside for career advice on the last day of 'Harry Potter' filming

 

Severus Snape actor Alan Rickman already had a career spanning more than 20 years by the time he took he took on the menacing role of Snape in "The Sorcerer's Stone." By then, he'd already had starring roles in major Hollywood movies such as "Die Hard," and had worked with some of the industry's biggest names including Bruce Willis, Kevin Costner, and Liam Neeson.

 

However, one of the young "Potter" actors - Matthew Lewis - managed to pluck up the courage to approach Rickman on the last day of filming the mammoth franchise. Lewis, who played Neville Longbottom, then ended up in Rickman's trailer, where the British veteran gave him a cup of tea and some career advice.

 

Lewis recalled the touching story during a recent appearance on Inside of You with Michael Rosenbaum.

 

"I went to his trailer and I just said to him, 'Hey, I know it's your last day, and I just wanted to say this has been incredible, to have worked with you for so long,'" Lewis recalled.

 

Lewis said that he told Rickman that he had always been "terrified" of him, but that he'd really appreciated the time they had working together despite not speaking very much. Rickman, Lewis said, was "incredible."

 

"I just want to say thank you for allowing me to work with you for 10 years and not ever shouting at me or treating any of us as anything less than your equal.'"

 

Lewis continued: "He was like, 'Come on in.' And he put the kettle on, and we had a cup of tea and we chatted about what I was going to do in my career moving forward and what he recommended I do."

 

Rickman, who died in 2016 aged 69 from cancer, left a great impression on many of his younger costars in the "Potter" series.

 

Harry Potter himself, Daniel Radcliffe, left a touching tribute to Rickman on Facebook shortly after the actor's death. According to The Independent, Radcliffe wrote that Rickman was "one of the loyalest and most supportive people I've ever met in the film industry."

 

"He was so encouraging of me both on set and in the years post-Potter. I'm pretty sure he came and saw everything I ever did on stage both in London and New York. He didn't have to do that," Radcliffe wrote.

 

Rickman starred in all eight "Potter" movies, and people loved his performance as Snape so much that there was even a campaign to get Rickman nominated for the best supporting actor Oscar for the final "Potter" movie, "Deathly Hallows Part 2."

 

Radcliffe himself said at the time: "I don't think there is going to be another performance from an actor in a supporting role that is so powerful."

 

While that campaign never materialized, Rickman did win a BAFTA award for best supporting actor for his playful turn as the Sheriff of Nottingham in 1991's "Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves." Rickman also starred in "Love Actually," "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street," and "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy."

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/matthew-lewis-says-alan-rickman-105813315.html

Anonymous ID: 9a7e11 April 13, 2021, 7:25 a.m. No.13415980   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5983

>>13415963

>Severus

 

Just thinking, what if the comms are pointing to SERVER US. US SEVER. Went to look up first Q post with Server. Brought up another question with the 5 steps. Recently, IIRC Drops had "night __" numbered. They stopped at 5.

 

28

 

>What must be completed to engage MI over other (3) letter agencies

During the 1950s and 60s, federal troops and federalized National

Guard forces, accompanied by military intelligence personnel, were

deployed to help integrate Southern schools23 and to help deal with

civil disorders in Detroit in 1967 and other cities the following year

after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.24 Throughout

this period military intelligence units also continued to collect data on

Americans at home who were suspected of involvement in subversive

activities.25 In the late 1960s, the Pentagon compiled personal

information on more than 100,000 politically active Americans in an

effort to quell civil rights and anti-Vietnam War demonstrations and

to discredit protestors.26 The Army used 1,500 plainclothes agents to

watch demonstrations, infiltrate organizations, and spread

disinformation. 2

' According to one report, the Army had at least one

observer at every demonstration of more than twenty people.28

The Army's activities were summed up by Senator Sam Ervin:

Allegedly for the purpose of predicting and preventing

civil disturbances which might develop beyond the control of

state and local officials, Army agents were sent throughout

the country to keep surveillance over the way the civilian

population expressed their sentiments about government

policies. In churches, on campuses, in classrooms, in public

meetings, they took notes, tape-recorded, and photographed

people who dissented in thought, word, or deed. This included clergymen, editors, public officials, and anyone who

sympathized with the dissenters.

 

https://digitalcommons.law.lsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=6053&context=lalrev

 

>Hahahaha, Trump has had MI infiltrate Antifa and all the dissenting local govts.

 

Always 5 steps ahead!

 

Please be true.

 

>>147450119

Well done. Picture being painted.