Anonymous ID: 02b375 Nov. 11, 2021, 4:23 p.m. No.14978715   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14978677

>the bible doesn't have to be literal factual history to be valuable

 

You don't know what you're talking ..IT HAS to be REAL about……Read the Bible 1st

 

The Most Complete And Comprehensive Reference Edition On The Hidden Bible Codes Published To Date.

 

Are we in possession of messages of extraterrestrial origin?

If so, what do they mean? What do these messages from the edge of eternity portend for the future?

Is it possible our universe itself is a “digital message”?

 

What has the science of cryptology revealed about these ancient texts?

Do these messages explain this interval between the miracle of our origin and the mystery of our destiny?

 

Study the implications of our finite universe and the shocking discoveries of quantum physics at the very boundaries of reality. Learn their significance to our origin and personal destinies! Your excitement will grow as Chuck Missler details astonishing hidden messages within the text of the Torah that could only have been placed there by the Great Author himself.

 

A former Navy engineer and silicon valley CEO, pastor and Bible teacher Chuck Missler explores the impact of information sciences on our understanding of ancient texts…including microcodes, macrocodes and metacodes…as well as the highly controversial “equidistant letter sequences” discovered in the Bible.

 

You will be able to use this exciting information to discover the hidden messages yourself, because many of them do not require a computer to decipher.

 

 

Chuck Missler has searched the entire range of the Bible and documented the presence of messages held beyond a simple reading of the text. For many, the information in Cosmic Codes: Hidden Messages from the Edge of Eternity will open very new meanings to this very old book.

Gerald L. Schroder, Ph.D.

Internationally Renowned Nuclear Physicist and Author of

Genesis and the Big Bang,

Jerusalem, Israel

Anonymous ID: 02b375 Nov. 11, 2021, 4:31 p.m. No.14978756   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8781 >>8819 >>8849 >>9003 >>9090 >>9143 >>9191 >>9267 >>9281 >>9307

>>14978730

Forced Sterilization in the United States

Eugenics and Forced Sterilization in the U.S.

 

Although the practice is usually associated with Nazi Germany, North Korea, and other oppressive regimes, it was the U.S. that first introduced forced sterilization laws. They were written in accordance with eugenic culture during the Antebellum Period. Here's a timeline of some of the more notable events since 1849.

 

Gordon Lincecum, a famed Texas biologist and physician, proposed a bill mandating the eugenic sterilization of the mentally handicapped and others whose genes he deemed undesirable. Although the legislation was never sponsored or brought up for a vote, it represented the first serious attempt in U.S. history to use forced sterilization for eugenic purposes.

1897

 

Michigan's state legislature became the first in the country to pass a forced sterilization law, but it was ultimately vetoed by the governor.

1901

 

Legislators in Pennsylvania attempted to pass a eugenic forced sterilization law, but it stalled.

 

1907

 

Indiana became the first state in the country to successfully pass a mandatory forced sterilization law impacting the "feebleminded," a term used at the time to refer to the mentally handicapped.

1909

 

California and Washington passed mandatory sterilization laws.

1922

 

Harry Hamilton Laughlin, director of the Eugenics Research Office, proposed a federal mandatory sterilization law. Like Lincecum's proposal, it never really went anywhere.

 

To many to post

Anonymous ID: 02b375 Nov. 11, 2021, 4:57 p.m. No.14978935   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>14978855

 

kek…How's that gonna work…biden said Calif was the Gold Standard …Coming nation wade ..SOON..kekekeke

 

California Power Outage Map

Use the interactive map to see when and where power outages happen

 

Millions of people throughout California lost power this past October as a result of intentional blackouts designed to cut the risk of wildfires. But these utility-initiated “de-energization events” were only a fraction of the power outages in the state over the last two years.

 

In fact, there were more than 50,000 significant blackout events in California. Many of these customers, defined as a single utility meter serving a home or a business, likely experienced multiple outages. There’s no way to determine which ones did. But taken together the blackouts impacted the equivalent of 51 million customers.

 

Electrical utilities report only their total outages and the customers they affected to state regulators each year, making it hard to track day-to-day blackouts. But Bloom, working with PowerOutage.us, a company that monitors utilities throughout the country, has tracked when and where every blackout occurred in California during this sample period and how many customers it impacted. (Read about our full methodology below.)

 

Explore the blackout map to see each outage that affected California and search for your town. Expand to full screen for the best experience, or use the code below to embed the map on your site. For the best viewing experience, please use a supported browser (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge)

 

Cities Are as Vulnerable as Rural Communities

 

Blackouts are often thought of as a rural problem. Not anymore. California’s five largest cities—Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, San Francisco, and Fresno—have a combined population of more than 7.7 million people. That’s about 20% of the state’s population. For the time covered in our data set, those cities experienced 10,417 outages, affecting the equivalent of 11.4 million utility customers, which is more than 20% of the total blackout events and more than 20% of the customers impacted. Los Angeles alone accounted for 5,787 blackout events affecting the equivalent of 6.4 million utility customers.

 

Among California’s 25 largest cities, San Bernardino—which had 1,208 blackout events affecting the equivalent of 1.4 million utility customers—experienced the most blackouts on a per capita basis. Using customers impacted divided by population as a rough approximation of how many times a typical resident experienced a blackout, the average person in San Bernardino experienced more than 6 outages.

 

The Risk of Power Outages Is Growing

 

Power outages are on the rise in California. There were 25,281 blackout events in 2019, a 23% increase from 20,598 in 2018. The number of utility customers affected jumped to 28.4 million in 2019, up 50% from 19 million in 2018.

 

October 2019 was by far the worst month for outages. The 3,683 blackout events represented an 80% increase from a year earlier, and the 7 million customers impacted was a 204% increase. This spike occurred as utilities began implementing a program of planned power outages to prevent their lines from sparking destructive wildfires on especially hot and dry days (more on this dramatic change below). But it isn’t just the dry months when the number of blackout events in 2019 exceeded those from 2018: January was up 38%, February was up 105%, and March was up 15%.

 

Below are the months with the most blackout events:

 

https://www.bloomenergy.com/bloom-energy-outage-map/

Anonymous ID: 02b375 Nov. 11, 2021, 5:48 p.m. No.14979280   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9297 >>9314

These guys are approaching 80 years old!!!! The fact that he's still out there doing this is unbelievable.

 

Paul McCartney & Ringo Starr & Ronnie Wood - Get Back [Live at O2 Arena, London - 16-12-2018]