Anonymous ID: 658206 May 11, 2021, 6:12 p.m. No.13639894   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9941

Main Dam Neck Annex Gate Closed

NSWDG DevGru joint

BREAKING

"NAS Oceana Dam Neck Annex main gate closes after civilian finds possible explosive device, brings it to base for disposal"

>https://www.wavy.com/news/military/navy/gate-at-nas-oceana-dam-neck-annex-closed-due-to-security-operations/

May 11, 2021 / 04:40 PM Updated: May 11, 2021 / 06:13 PM EDT

Anonymous ID: 658206 May 11, 2021, 6:40 p.m. No.13640189   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0243 >>0277 >>0290 >>0312

>>13639914

>>13640120

>https://marriedbiography.org/where-is-jimmy-carters-daughter-today-amy-carters-bio/

After her teen years, Carter became a well-known face in the field of political activism.

She was a regular attendant at most protests that advocated for a change in US policy towards Central America and South African apartheid during the late 1980s and early 1990s. She was even arrested in 1986, together with civil rights leader Abbie Hoffman and 13 other activists during a demonstration that was held at the University of Massachusetts, but was released of all charges thanks to the famous attorney Leonard Weinglass. The demonstrations were focused against the recruitment of people for the CIA in colleges, and her defense was based on claims that the CIA itself had involvement in illegal activities, thus the enlistment on campus was deemed trespassing. It was speculated that this event was what got her dismissed from Brown University at the time, despite the institution’s official statement. She became a member of the counselor board of the “Carter Center”, a non-profit organization founded by her father in 1982 after he lost the 1980 presidential election. The goal of the organization is to advocate human rights and diplomacy. She was also portrayed in Jimmy Carter’s book for children that was published in 1996, “The Little Baby Snoogie-Fleejer”, that Carter also illustrated.

Carter is living away from the spotlight, and can rarely be seen in public photos or media. The sources from the media state that she remarried and welcomed her second child, but as of March 2020 there is no information about her child or the identity of her second husband. She doesn’t have any social media profiles, and little to nothing is known about her everyday life. She also refuses to grant interviews. She currently lives in Atlanta, together with her family. Her eldest brother, John William “Jack” Carter was a candidate for the first major office, as well as the Democratic nominee for the US senate in 2006, but lost against a Republican senator.

James Earl “Chip” Carter was a Democratic National Committee participant, while his son unearthed the infamous “47%” video that was aimed against Mitt Romney. The youngest brother, Donnel Jeffrey “Jeff” Carter is a consultant, and one of the co-founders of the company called Computer Mapping Consultants.

Despite many similarities in their biography, Carter is not to be confused with another Amy Carter from political society – former Democratic-turned-Republican, a member of the Georgia House of Representatives and the executive director at the Technical College System of Georgia.

Thanks partly to her father’s career in politics, as well as her own endeavors, Carter has earned quite a fortune. Despite her not revealing her earnings, her net worth is estimated by sources at around $7 million.