Anonymous ID: ca2461 Sept. 28, 2021, 10:13 a.m. No.14679896   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9905

>>14679880

>This one just started

Probably wrong…

 

21

Anonymous 11/01/2017 00:48:20

I’ve dumped some crumbs like this over the weekend which started the intense shilling. At this point we are far enough along you can paint the picture without risk of jeopardizing the operation.

Anonymous ID: ca2461 Sept. 28, 2021, 10:47 a.m. No.14680112   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0175 >>0186

Crimes Against Humanity. If people are VAXED, they didn't die from COVID. They were SHOT TO DEATH.

 

Vaccinated Michigan couple die minutes apart from COVID-19 while holding hands

 

A vaccinated Michigan couple died less than a minute apart Monday from a breakthrough case of COVID-19. The two were holding hands when they died.

 

Cal Dunham, 59, and Linda Dunham, 66, started to feel sick during a family camping trip earlier this month but assumed it was a cold. Their daughter, Sarah Dunham, said her father warned her that the couple was not feeling well. The couple was hospitalized and placed on ventilators a few days later, according to a local Fox station.

 

Doctors told Dunham on Sunday there was not much else they could do, and the couple would likely need to come off life-support the following day. When it came time to disconnect the couple on Monday, Cal was wheeled into Linda's room, and the couple was reunited. Fox-17 reported that moments later, the couple held hands, and Cal died at 11:07 a.m. with Linda right behind him at 11:08 a.m.

 

“[My father] called me before our family camping trip and said he wasn’t feeling good, but he thinks it’s just like sinus, and [Linda] caught it, and she’s like, 'He gave me his cold,'” Dunham told the local outlet. “The third day, they woke me up and said, ‘We’ve got to go because we don’t feel well.’ So I packed them all up, and they left.”

 

“She always joked and said, ‘Well, you’re going to go before I am. I’ll be right there behind you. I promise,'" Dunham said of her mother. "She really was, like she really was right there behind him.”

 

According to Dunham, the couple took the virus seriously and were always cautious. However, both had underlying health issues. Dunham said it was comforting to know that her parents were together in both life and death. But her comfort turned to anger at the people who were not taking the virus seriously.

 

“I’m angry because so many people are like, ‘If I catch COVID, I catch COVID. That’s what it is.' No, it’s not,” Dunham said. “It could be any person. It could be anybody. They did everything right. They did everything to protocol the way it should be done.”

 

According to the New York Times, 22,227 people in Michigan have died from COVID-19, and 690,558 people have died in the United States.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/vaccinated-michigan-couple-die-minutes-145200142.html

Anonymous ID: ca2461 Sept. 28, 2021, 11:07 a.m. No.14680247   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14680186

>to justify the psyop that is a Crown taking over the planet with a NWO rebrand

 

As ancient Egyptian rulers, pharaohs were both the heads of state and the religious leaders of their people. The word “pharaoh” means “Great House,” a reference to the -palace where the pharaoh resides. While early Egyptian rulers were called “kings,” over time, the name “pharaoh” stuck.

 

As the religious leader of the Egyptians, the pharaoh was considered the divine intermediary between the gods and Egyptians. Maintaining religious harmony and participating in ceremonies were part of the pharaoh’s role as head of the religion. As a statesman, the pharaoh made laws, waged war, collected taxes, and oversaw all the land in Egypt (which was owned by the pharaoh).

 

Many scholars believe the first pharaoh was Narmer, also called Menes. Though there is some debate among experts, many believe he was the first ruler to unite upper and lower Egypt (this is why pharaohs hold the title of “lord of two lands”). Pharaohs were typically male, although there were some noteworthy female leaders, like Hatshepsut and Cleopatra. Hatshepsut, in particular, was a successful ruler, but many inscriptions and monuments about her were destroyed after her death—perhaps to stop future women from becoming pharaohs.

 

After their deaths, many pharaohs were entombed and surrounded by riches they were meant to use in the afterlife. Explorers and archaeologists have discovered these tombs and learned a great deal about ancient Egyptian society from them. One very famous example was in 1922 when archaeologist Howard Carter discovered the tomb of King Tutankhamen, a pharaoh who died when he was only nineteen.

 

https://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/pharaohs/