Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:21 a.m. No.14478541   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8548 >>8560

I got some real info

Mom and Dad 68 and 72

Moderna about 3 months ago (DR. tenpenny said 3 months)

Sister called yesterday both trouble breathing their DR say goto ER

I spend all day thinking they are gonna go down hard

quite disturbing.

Sister calls that evening says they are home

both diagnosed with pneumonia, dad, the oldest is very sick.

My parents are very unhealthy, I expected them to die, and yet they live (KEK) It didn't kill my Mom (diabetes, bad kidneys and in a wheelchair for last 10 years, uses a cpac machine) I'm starting to doubt this depop thing.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:29 a.m. No.14478571   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14478560

Shit, yes I forgot, my MOM did talk to my wife

said difficulty breathing and no smell.

They blamed it on a visitor who sneezed on them.

my wife said sounds like Covid

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:39 a.m. No.14478598   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8605

>>14478594

found this

 

The power of suggestion is so strong that it makes you change your habits. For example, after watching a news story about a group of robbers assaulting someone who arrived home after 10 at night, you might pressure yourself to get home at 9:30. 5. It condemns innocent people

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:45 a.m. No.14478614   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8698 >>8701

Power of suggestion

  1. It makes us “sick”

 

If you put someone in a room, release smoke from a novelty fog machine, and tell them that it’s a toxic gas, they’ll probably gasp for air, think they’re going to die, and experience the symptoms of someone who’s been poisoned.

 

To use a less extreme example, after hearing about the Zika virus on the news, you’ll feel frightened when you see a mosquito, and if it bites you, you might even develop a fever and joint pain as though the mosquito really were infected.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:47 a.m. No.14478619   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8630

Power of suggestion

  1. It makes us work better

 

The Hawthorne effect is one of the most well-known effects related to the power of suggestion. It’s based on the idea that when we’re being observed, we act differently. As such, employees work harder and more effectively when they think their boss is watching.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 12:48 a.m. No.14478622   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Power of suggestion

 

  1. It condemns innocent people

 

If, before viewing a police lineup, you hear someone say “I’m sure that the robber had a beard,” you’re more likely to point out a person with a beard, even if you’ve never seen them before, or even if you were sure that the robber was beardless just a few minutes ago. Suggestion alters your memory in such a way that you forget what you actually experienced.

 

We don’t mean that we’re all strangers to making decisions, or that there’s a higher force that changes our opinions. But it’s important to understand the role that suggestion plays in our daily lives and how we can deal with it. Much of what you believe might just be a product of your imagination!

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 1:16 a.m. No.14478703   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8724

>>14478693

I remember before Q

the was this guy on youtube talking about an "insider" the guy said the most important thing

going into what was coming, was to maintain

a peaceful and untroubled mind.

He said it was the most important thing.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 1:23 a.m. No.14478729   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8731 >>8749 >>8784

>>14478711

My wife wanted to get the vaxx as she was getting flack from her employer and this is fucked up but

her friend would not let her near her newborn without it. I strongly suggested she do the non MRA J&J as the media seamed to only show J&J side effects. She took one shot and so far

been about 3 months ago no ill effects.

I can only hope it stays that way.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 2:12 a.m. No.14478877   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8937

>>14478855

>anon doesn’t like the thought of killing anybody.

 

When Col. Samuel Lyman Marshall came home in 1945, he was one of millions of Americans who had served in the Second World War. Perhaps a third of them had seen combat, and Marshall, as the European theater’s deputy historian, had talked to an unprecedentedly large number of them. In a few months he began the little book that was to make him S. L. A. Marshall, a respected and highly influential military historian. In the 211 pages of Men Against Fire, Marshall made an astonishing assertion: In any given body of American infantry in combat, no more than one-fifth, and generally as few as 15 percent, had ever fired their weapons at an enemy, indeed ever fired their weapons at all.

 

From that day to this, S. L. A. Marshall is famous as a man who penetrated a great and terrible mystery. His writing on the refusal to fire—what Marshall called the ratio of fire—was the keystone of his achievement. While a fair number of people had always had an impressionistic sense of the phenomenon, Marshall had replaced anecdotal evidence with hard numbers.

 

Marshall, in the eyes of his many admirers, had shifted the history of war on its axis, turning it away from the annals of generalship toward the discovery of what men actully did and thought and felt on a battlefield. The admiration Marshall’s discovery inspired is caught in the words of John Keegan, the dean of the school of military history that is deeply indebted to the tradition that Marshall dominates: Marshall “was touched by genius,” Keegan wrote, a man who had brilliantly democratized the study of war.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 2:23 a.m. No.14478917   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8923

>>14478905

Learn to pay absolute attention

When you are in total observation you are not thinking, your too busy observing, in this way

you are most aware of everything that is not you.

which is where those disturbing thought originate.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 2:34 a.m. No.14478952   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8961

>>14478945

>romania

speaking of, have you seen Vee's

video about how the monument Kameltoe

put the flowers on was to the people who shot Mcstain down?

 

https://www.bitchute.com/video/NhyJ1yFTg4Q/

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 2:51 a.m. No.14478988   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9007

By March 22, 1952, germs and insects spread by the U.S. aircraft had been found in a total of 155 villages in Kuandian and had infected residents and livestock, according to Zhang Ruifa, a former researcher with the Kuandian county records office.

 

Data from the archives of Dandong City, which administers Kuandian, shows that between February and October 1952, U.S. airplanes made 298 intrusions into the border city and dropped 205 bacterial bombs that disseminated dozens of species of poisonous insects and germs. Human and animal infections and casualties were reported in the affected areas.

 

The history of U.S. germ warfare during the Korean War has been further corroborated by the "Report of the International Scientific Commission for the Investigation of the Facts Concerning Bacterial Warfare in Korea and China," a report compiled in 1952 by a team of prominent international scientists following field investigations in China and the DPRK.

 

The expert team included Joseph Needham from Britain, Samuel B. Pessoa from Brazil, Jean Malterre from France, Andrea Andreen from Sweden, Franco Graziosi and Oliviero Olivo from Italy, N. N. Zhukov-Verezhnikov from the USSR, and Qian Sanqiang from China. Since June 1952, the team conducted months-long investigations in China and the DPRK before compiling the report.

Anonymous ID: cf00fd Aug. 28, 2021, 3:18 a.m. No.14479061   🗄️.is 🔗kun

check it Cali's nervous

 

If the polls are any guide, the recall election is too close for comfort. And if you think the election’s impact on your life will be remote, consider this: Should California Senator Dianne Feinstein, 88 years old and in declining health, take leave of her post for any reason, the recall’s victor may get to appoint her replacement and end the Democrats’ narrow Senate majority. What catches fire in California may soon burn everyone.

 

https://newrepublic.com/article/163457/california-recall-election-wreck-country