Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 7:21 a.m. No.15063725   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3745 >>3792

>>15063111

trips for your trips

MikeLindell

LinWood

Genral FLynn

 

linen (n.)

"cloth from woven flax," early 14c., noun use of adjective linen "made of flax" from Old English līn "flax, linen thread, linen cloth" + -en (2). Old English lin is from Proto-Germanic *linam (source also of Old Saxon, Old Norse, Old High German lin "flax, linen," German Leinen "linen," Gothic lein "linen cloth"), probably an early borrowing from Latin linum "flax, linen," which, along with Greek linon is from a non-Indo-European language. Beekes writes, "Original identity is possible, however, since the cultivation of flax in Central Europe is very old. Still, it is more probable that linon and linum derive from a Mediterranean word. The word is unknown in Indo-Iranian (but the concept is, of course)." Lithuanian linai, Old Church Slavonic linu, Irish lin probably are ultimately from Latin or Greek.

https://www.etymonline.com/word/linen

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 7:58 a.m. No.15063929   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15063905

pure bloods? you buy and consume all your store bought food and beverage and pills and media from the same corruptors.

 

The same forces corrupt the municipal water supply, the air, the EMF field, and the soil.

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:05 a.m. No.15063965   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3992 >>4007 >>4013 >>4062

>>15063796

>the 1953 Trust

 

Bill Gates Adviser ‘Shocked’ Jeffrey Epstein Named Him in Will

 

Harvard-trained immunologistBoris Nikolicsays he has no intention of serving as backup executor to the deceased pedophile’s last-minute will benefiting the mysterious1953 Trust.

 

https://www.thedailybeast.com/jeffrey-epsteins-will-leaves-dollar577-million-to-mysterious-trust

 

https://www.forbes.com/sites/isabeltogoh/2019/08/20/jeffrey-epstein-put-his-assets-in-a-trustbut-heres-how-his-alleged-victims-can-go-after-his-estate/?sh=55832ec35a85

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:08 a.m. No.15063992   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4007

>>15063965

" ”the 1953 trust” is the entity in which Epstein left his money

Yes it is his birth year supposedly,

 

But it Is also the year Watson and Crick mapped the human genome."

 

https://www.genome.gov/25520255/online-education-kit-1953-dna-double-helix

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:11 a.m. No.15064007   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4017 >>4020

>>15063796

>>15063992

https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2019/08/19/jeffrey-epsteins-will-leaves-fortune-to-trust-not-family-signed-48-hours-before-death/

 

"Court documents obtained by the New York Post shows Epstein’s will was filed in St. Thomas of the U.S. Virgin Islands and signed on August 8th. The will reportedly shows the disgraced financier had a net worth of $577,672,654, roughly $18 million more than he claimed during his failed attempt to obtain bail while awaiting a federal sex trafficker case. Epstein reportedly placed his entire fortune in a trust called “The 1953 Trust.”

 

“There are no details on the trust’s beneficiaries. The court papers note that Epstein’s only potential heir was his brother, Mark Epstein. But the will adds that Mark only had a claim to his brother’s extensive holdings if Jeffrey hadn’t left behind the document,” reports the Post."

 

>>15063965

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:23 a.m. No.15064073   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4076 >>4090

>>15064043

>false memories

https://www.rt.com/news/519038-german-researchers-create-erase-memories/

 

German researchers create, then erase, false memories in people’s minds

24 Mar, 2021

 

A team of researchers in Germany has completed successful experiments in which they showcased how false memories can easily be planted and, more importantly, erased, with potentially serious implications for the justice system.

The team, from the University of Hagen, Leibniz-Institut für Wissensmedien, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, and the University of Portsmouth conducted a series of memory experiments on volunteers over the course of several sessions.

 

They wanted to both confirm that it is possible to implant (or incept, if you will) false memories in the mind of a subject using certain psychological techniques and tricks that rely heavily on the power of suggestion through repetition, while also discovering to what extent these memories can be erased.

 

In this latest experiment, the researchers created fictional, but plausible, stories from 52 participants’ childhoods and blended them with events that actually took place.

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:24 a.m. No.15064076   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4078

>>15064073

 

he researchers then reinforced these false memories in the minds of the participants by asking the volunteers’ parents to play along and claim things happened exactly as described, including the additional, fictional elements.

 

This process was repeated over the course of multiple sessions to such a degree that many of the participants became convinced the accounts were, in fact, true and thus, a false memory was born.

 

Now all that remained was to extricate these false memories from the minds of the volunteers, which turned out to be almost as easy as implanting them had been.

 

They merely asked the volunteers to identify the source of the memory while highlighting the fact that false memories can be created through a process of repeated, elicited recall that itself can become a form of conditioning.

 

“If you can bring people to this point where they are aware of that, you can empower them to stay closer to their own memories and recollections, and rule out the suggestion from other sources,” psychologist Aileen Oeberst at the University of Hagen says.

 

Again, over the course of multiple sessions, volunteers began to shed the false memories that they had previously believed, with a little nudge from their parents, were completely real, with the majority returning to the baseline of credulity from their initial meeting during which the false memory ‘inception’ began.

 

During follow-ups a year later, some 74 percent of the volunteers had lost their false memories or even outright rejected them as ever having occurred.

 

The implications of this kind of disturbing but important research might be far-reaching in the realm of criminal justice, with methods employed by prosecutors, police, and others called into question when seeking the ‘truth’ of a past event.

Anonymous ID: 02584a Nov. 23, 2021, 8:24 a.m. No.15064078   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15064076

“Faulty memory may not matter in everyday life – if I tell you I had chicken last night instead of pizza, it may not matter,” says false-memory expert Elizabeth Loftus.

 

“But very precise memory does matter when we’re talking about these legal cases. It matters whether the bad guy had curly hair or straight hair, or whether the car went through a red light or a green light.”