Anonymous ID: 58332c Nov. 12, 2021, 3:06 p.m. No.14985759   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5765

REPOST IN ACTIVE BREAD - KENOSHA WATCH - ANON PROMISED TO A SUMMARY OR FIND SOMEONE ELSE'S AND ADD NOTE TO IT, SEE LINKED VIDEO AND NOTES

THIS IS AS GOOD AS A SUMMARY THERE IS OF DAY 8 OF THE RITTENHOUSE TRIAL, JUST A COUPLE OF NOTES TO HIGHLIGHT BELOW NOT COVERED !!

The video from the fbi drone image which magically turned up after a year showing the enhancement of Kyle holding the gun should not have been submitted, because this could easily have been doctored by the fbi, who cannot be trusted. All other videos used was from the public and were played without tampering with the video.

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Rittenhouse Trial Final Day RECAP - Objection, Rejection & Projection - Viva Frei Vlawg

35,278 views12 Nov 2021

https://youtu.be/GwDb-IOzZZw

A summary of the final day of trial. Enjoy!

Anonymous ID: 58332c Nov. 12, 2021, 4:08 p.m. No.14986214   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6238

>>14986161

>>14986149

correct, it is bill not check, take it back

Checking In with 'Check' and 'Cheque'

Our endorsement for each.

What to Know

Cheque is the British English spelling for the document used for making a payment, whereas American English uses check. Check also has a number of other uses as a noun (e.g., a check mark, a hit in hockey, etc.) and as a verb ("to inspect," "to limit," etc.).

In the US, we often use check to refer to the document stating an amount due (as in "asked the waiter for the check"). In most British English publications, such a document is referred to simply as a bill.

 

The spelling cheque survives in particular uses with regard to other senses. Chequer was once the British name for a checkerboard or chessboard. The name Exchequer survives as the name of a government accounting office; its purported origin is the checkered surface of the table on which stones were maneuvered in calculations, much like an abacus. For the game played on such a patterned board using red and black disks, however, British English speakers eschew the term checkers for a completely different name: draughts.