Anonymous ID: 25457b April 25, 2021, 8:25 a.m. No.13509793   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9823 >>9859 >>9879

This is the SPOOPIES shit ever. That doesn't even look like a baby. It looks like a doll. (pics at link) Pic is the SPOOPIEST one. That is an Altered pic.

 

Ashley Cain's Baby Daughter Azaylia, 8 Months, Dead After Cancer Battle

 

Ashley Cain and Safiyya Vorajee are mourning the death of their 8-month-old baby girl Azaylia Diamond after a battle with leukemia.

 

On Sunday, The Challenge star, 30, revealed the tragic news that his daughter died after first revealing that she was fighting leukemia last October.

 

"Rest In Paradise Princess 👼🏼🌈 I will always hold you in my heart until I can hold you again in heaven ❤️😢 #AzayliaDiamondCain," he wrote on Instagram.

 

"You are my Angel my heartbeat my soul, RIP my precious baby, you will always be with me like a handprint on my heart," Vorajee wrote in her own tribute.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/ashley-cains-baby-daughter-azaylia-124800603.html

Anonymous ID: 25457b April 25, 2021, 8:47 a.m. No.13509922   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9961 >>9989

Mike Pence's COVID Rule-Busting Vail Vacation Cost Public $757,000 In Security Costs Alone

 

Mary Papenfuss·Trends Reporter, HuffPost

Sun, April 25, 2021, 6:20 AM

 

Mike Pence took heat when he broke COVID-19 safety recommendations to hit the slopes at Vail last year for a Colorado family ski vacation while he was vice president. Now it turns out that he also broke the bank, sticking the public with a $757,000 tab in Secret Service costs alone, according to a watchdog group.

 

At the time he was schussing down the Vail slopes in December, Pence was head of the White House coronavirus task force. That same task force had issued dire warnings about the pandemic just weeks earlier, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention urged Americans to stay home for the holidays to help stop the spread of the disease.

 

Not only did Pence not follow that advice, he forced his Secret Service crew to ignore it as well. According to records obtained by Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, at least 48 agents accompanied Pence and his family on the ski vacation from Dec. 23 to Jan. 1.

 

Agents stayed at different hotels in the area and rented 77 cars. Charges included more than $270,000 at the Marriott Vail Mountain, and more than $80,000 at the Ritz Carlton, CREW reported.

 

The spread of COVID-19 among Secret Service agents was a concern in an administration notably lax about health safeguards. Career Secret Service staff even suggested an investigation into the issue by Joseph Cuffari, the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security, The Washington Post reported Tuesday. But Cuffari, a Trump appointee, opted not to look into it, according to records obtained by the Project on Government Oversight. Cuffari was reportedly worried that findings about coronavirus cases among agents might reflect badly on the Trump administration.

 

Hundreds of Secret Service officers were either infected with COVID-19 or had to quarantine after potential exposure last year as Donald Trump continued to travel and hold campaign events during the pandemic, ignoring health experts’ advice.

 

Trump was harshly criticized after he was diagnosed with COVID-19 and opted to take a tour in his presidential car with Secret Service agents to hail supporters outside Walter Reed hospital, where he was being treated. Attending physician Dr. James Phillips slammed Trump then about risking agents’ lives for “political theater.”

 

A spokesperson for the inspector general told the Post that officials determined that investigative resources would be better used elsewhere, but did not specify where.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/huffpost/mike-pence-covid-vail-vacation-132009079.html

Anonymous ID: 25457b April 25, 2021, 8:56 a.m. No.13509994   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0003 >>0025 >>0040

A book published almost 25 years ago predicted that the 'Next New Deal' would follow a period of great social unrest in 2020 - and that millennials would take the reins after decades of boomer rule

 

America is currently in the midst of a millennial vs. boomer showdown - and a "gray champion" is arriving to usher in the "Next New Deal."

 

So says an eerie generational theory known as the Fourth Turning, which was coined in 1997 by Neil Howe and William Strauss in an eponymous book. The theory proposes that America sees a "turning" every 20 years as one generation displaces another, and that this dynamic between the two creates a crisis every 80 years.

 

Each crisis is marked by four stages: a catalyst event that sets the wheels in motion; a regeneracy in which people stop tolerating weakening institutions and splintering culture; a climax that "shakes society to its roots," transforms institutions, and redirects purpose; and a resolution that sees the economy entirely restructured for a new set of circumstances.

 

It's an outlandish theory and the book has also been widely criticized for its lack of scientific support and vague predictions. But it's also resonated among conservative and liberal leaders alike, and bears uncanny parallels to American history.

 

The last fourth turnings, Howe and Strauss argued, culminated in World War II, the Civil War, and the American Revolution. They wrote that the next crisis-era would involve millennials and boomers fighting over the shape of the world to come, with the catalyst event beginning around 2005, and the climax around 2020, with a resolution by 2026.

 

America is currently in the midst of a millennial vs. boomer showdown - and a "gray champion" is arriving to usher in the "Next New Deal."

 

So says an eerie generational theory known as the Fourth Turning, which was coined in 1997 by Neil Howe and William Strauss in an eponymous book. The theory proposes that America sees a "turning" every 20 years as one generation displaces another, and that this dynamic between the two creates a crisis every 80 years.

 

Each crisis is marked by four stages: a catalyst event that sets the wheels in motion; a regeneracy in which people stop tolerating weakening institutions and splintering culture; a climax that "shakes society to its roots," transforms institutions, and redirects purpose; and a resolution that sees the economy entirely restructured for a new set of circumstances.

 

It's an outlandish theory and the book has also been widely criticized for its lack of scientific support and vague predictions. But it's also resonated among conservative and liberal leaders alike, and bears uncanny parallels to American history.

 

The last fourth turnings, Howe and Strauss argued, culminated in World War II, the Civil War, and the American Revolution. They wrote that the next crisis-era would involve millennials and boomers fighting over the shape of the world to come, with the catalyst event beginning around 2005, and the climax around 2020, with a resolution by 2026.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/book-published-almost-25-years-125500971.html