Anonymous ID: 425924 June 27, 2021, 4:45 a.m. No.13996126   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6144

>>13995856

Former Marketing pro for cardiology devices here.

These devices are sold as "life-savers". However you are at risk of death EVERY MINUTE from a device failure. These devices are made by engineers and greedy corporate assholes. Some say they care, but they make MILLIONS and do not EVER share in the responsibility for the DEATHS and complications that occur.

 

And they happen ALL the time, mitigated by the manufacturer to appear minor. Any defect in the design of this will kill you and in a horrible way. You will throw a clot or have a stroke, making those "555" sometimes the most harrowing of your life.

 

Yes, these people need help. But it has become a monstrous money making, lying industry leading people to think this is a solution. It is not, even the doctors know it. It is barbaric - they cut out a portion of your heart like coring an apple. You are now a machine with a battery strapped to your waist.

 

Frankensteinism.

I would not take it as an option.

Anonymous ID: 425924 June 27, 2021, 5:56 a.m. No.13996422   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6445

>>13996407

they found it, and lied.

 

According to popular legend, tons of gold being transported from West Virginia to the US Mint in Philadelphia in 1863 were intercepted by bandits, or went missing. Ever since, treasure hunters have been on the prowl for the booty, which could potentially be worth hundreds of millions of dollars.

 

The FBI theorized that the Knights of the Golden Circle (KGC), a secret society of Confederate sympathizers, may have been behind the fabled heist. The group โ€œburied secret caches of weapons, coins, and gold and silver bullion, much of which was stolen from robberies of banks, trains carrying payroll of the Union Army during the Civil War and from northern army military posts, in southern, western and northern states,โ€ the feds wrote in their affidavit, which was released after the Associated Press and the Philadelphia Inquirer petitioned a federal judge to unseal the case. A turtle carving on a rock near the suspected site of the treasure โ€œvery likelyโ€ served as a marker used by the KGC, the document read.

 

According to the affidavit, the FBI received help from amateur treasure hunters who made regular trips to the area. They reportedly identified a location that showed signs of a buried metal with the density of gold. They then tipped off the FBI, hoping that they would be rewarded with a finderโ€™s fee.

 

The FBI then hired private contractors, who used more sophisticated equipment to confirm an underground mass that weighed up to nine tons and had the density of gold, the affidavit stated.

 

The feds then carried out an excavation โ€“ allegedly under the cover of darkness โ€“ and prevented the amateur treasure hunters from accessing the site. The digging operation reportedly also involved armored cars, which were spotted driving back and forth throughout the night.

 

The FBI claimed that they found nothing at the site, and showed the treasure hunters an โ€œempty holeโ€ at the spot where they suspected the gold may have been buried. A forensic test carried out after the FBI left allegedly showed there were no longer any signs of the metal that had previously been detected.