Anonymous ID: 34e311 July 6, 2021, 4:33 p.m. No.14069009   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9026

>>14068509

 

Despite knowing I'll get flamed for this, the "pollinators" part does bring to mind the lower banner at that https://www.ingersolllockwood.com/our-history/ site.

 

"Save the Bees, Save our natural Food Supply…" I.L. note #13790 "oh and don't forget to set the 90 day timer…" I.L. note #13848

 

(search for 13848 at qagg.news gives single Q4253 re: Grenell and changes to election security briefings. Prolly just coincidence.)

 

other thought is that "pollinators" (a.k.a. bees) is COMMS for Merovingian(s) → elite bloodlines

 

just found this, though, on bees/Merovingian:

 

The treasure still includes Byzantine coins, jewels from Childéric’s sword and scramasax (a large knife used in war and hunting), a Frankish ax blade, the fibula that would hold the paludamentum (dress cloak or cape worn by Roman military commanders), a crystal ball, and, shown here, two of the golden bees orcicadaswith cloisonné garnet wings (garnet insets) that were used to decorate either the royal coat or the harness of the king’s horse. These Merovingian bees inspiredNapoleon,who, in a departure from the fleur-de-lys used from the reign of Hugh Capet in the tenth century, adopted them as the symbol of the French Empire.

 

Cicadas / 17 years → Q

 

Are we on Team Merovingian? (Bloodline dynastic conflict?)

 

https://www.wdl.org/en/item/14235/

 

okay, let me have it

Anonymous ID: 34e311 July 6, 2021, 4:43 p.m. No.14069080   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9109

>>14069026

 

Was more thinking of Great Awakening. Bosley makes dasting argument that it was actually Napoleon that came to US and not his bro - the old switcheroo.

 

Nappy B did bees.

 

Though Chifflet thought they looked like bees, many modern-day scholars believe they were intended to representcicadasor crickets, which were the symbols of death and resurrection to the Merovingians.

 

https://regencyredingote.wordpress.com/2010/10/22/the-bees-of-napoleon/