Anonymous ID: 70416a Aug. 30, 2021, 1:46 p.m. No.14493155   🗄️.is 🔗kun

I called poison control they first said only three cases in the month of august then they called back said that they had to call the other two locations to find out the total number of cases, Im willing to bet all the cases came from dade and are made up

 

0 death

1 major

4 moderate

22 minor

8 lost contact

 

So they wont give any information on the amount or dose taken or the brand used or if it was mixed with another de worming drugs.

 

They are demonizing ivermectine now like HCQ before Regeneron is the only allowable therapy now

 

https://www.wfla.com/news/florida/spike-in-poisonings-from-livestock-deworming-drug-reported-in-florida/

 

Ivermectin: Florida Poison Control sees increase in calls from people taking livestock deworming drug

 

https://twitter.com/FloridaPoison/status/1430278382210600963

Anonymous ID: 70416a Aug. 30, 2021, 2:04 p.m. No.14493239   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14492921

>>14492929

A lot of people don’t seem to grasp how problematic it would be for a president or an attorney general to be caught red-handed interfering with a special counsel’s office investigating what were widely alleged to be serious and historical abuses of federal law enforcement and surveillance powers in the targeting of a political campaign during a presidential election.

 

The fact is—and it appears many have kind of forgotten about it at this point and need to be reminded—the Department of Justice’s own Inspector General Michael Horowitz released a damning report back in December 2019 (pdf) that overwhelmingly demonstrated that a federal surveillance warrant of a former Trump campaign adviser was granted through deliberate fraud committed against the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) by the FBI’s Crossfire Hurricane team and the private political operatives they were using as informants.

 

Not only that, it subsequently turned out these political operatives working as FBI informants were actually paid employees of the other campaign in the 2016 election—that of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton.

 

Now, if that sounds like something that should never have been allowed to happen—one campaign feeding the FBI fake allegations against the other to get a federal agency to employ its considerable surveillance and law enforcement powers to target and politically damage its rival candidate before an American presidential election—you’d be exactly right.

 

Supposedly, we didn’t have a federal government where this kind of thing could even be attempted, much less successfully accomplished. Paid operatives should not have been able to become key informants for the FBI in a probe aimed at the Trump campaign. Before it was fully exposed, many people were confidently asserting that what happened in the Spygate scandal was impossible.

 

And yet it did happen.

 

Every single carefully placed safeguard, federal regulation, and policy that should have prevented this scandal from occurring was somehow bypassed or subverted.

 

Prosecutor John Durham’s assigned task was to go in and break down the nuts-and-bolts activity of how exactly this entire federal government fiasco came about, to determine who did what and who should be held accountable for any criminal conduct.

Leak Campaigns Are Springing Up From Witnesses

 

Recently, multiple leaks indicating that both the Hunter Biden and the Spygate investigations are alive and well have appeared in the mainstream media.

 

Back in April anonymous sources went to The New York Times to reveal how Washington D.C.-based think tank the Brookings Institution had been forced to turn over subpoenaed documents to Durham’s special counsel’s office related to Igor Danchenko.

 

If you recall, Clinton political operative Christopher Steele had named Danchenko to the FBI as his primary source for the fantastic Trump-Russia collusion rumors that appeared in his now-infamous “Steele Dossier.” Upon being questioned by the FBI about that after a surveillance warrant had already been granted by the FISA Court based on the dossier’s fake claims, Danchenko had rigorously denied to the interviewing agents that he was Steele’s source for those allegations. (Despite Danchenko’s denial of being the source, the spy warrant was subsequently renewed two more times.)

 

What this leak made clear is that Durham is indeed deeply digging into exactly how the unverified and fake allegations in the Steele dossier ended up being used to target former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page for a surveillance warrant.

 

One of the key things for Durham is going to be answering this question: If Danchenko wasn’t the source of the dossier’s false allegations that ended up being the basis for a fraudulent spy warrant on a U.S. citizen, then who was?

 

Then in quick succession over the past two weeks, three leaks appeared in other media outlets. Stories in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and the Washington Examiner demonstrate not only that Durham’s Spygate investigation is still going, but that it’s also beginning to create a backlash among its targets.

 

It appears that people subpoenaed to come to testify under oath to Durham’s federal grand jury have begun loudly complaining that Attorney General Merrick Garland had better do something soon to get that Durham fellow under control.

All You Get From Silence Is Silence; It Isn’t Evidence of Anything

 

It’s easy to speculate that Joe Biden or Garland immediately moved to close down the Hunter laptop and Spygate cases. What’s harder to do is to verify that.

 

Because both these investigations have proceeded under complete radio silence since their inceptions, this allowed people to “read” the silence in a way that always ended up confirming their own biases. The silence was taken to mean that “nothing is happening.”