Anonymous ID: cb1480 Dec. 12, 2021, 9:54 a.m. No.15181892   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2000

an interesting trove of photos supposedly found in a Palm Beach thrift shop

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3917572/Donald-Trump-wife-Ivana-hobnob-Ronald-Reagan-Prince-Philip-Malcolm-Forbes-photos-discovered-Palm-Beach-thrift-shop.html

Anonymous ID: cb1480 Dec. 12, 2021, 10:06 a.m. No.15181949   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1995 >>2010

P is Pindar and/or Pope

 

There have been rumors in circulation in books[1} and on the Internet, that Pindar should be the head of the Illuminati on Planet Earth, and perhaps even a full blooded Draco alien from the lower 4th dimension. This is what Zagami has to say about Pindar:

 

"The most important military citadel in central London - and arguably in Britain - is PINDAR, a bunker built beneath the Ministry of Defence on Whitehall. Its construction, which took ten years and reportedly cost £126.3 million, finally came to a conclusion in 1994, but PINDAR became operational two years earlier, in 1992.1 The high cost became the subject of some controversy in the early 1990s. Much of the cost overrun was related to the facility's computer equipment, which proved extremely difficult to install due to the very limited degree of physical access to the site.

 

PINDAR's main function is to serve as a crisis management and communications centre, principally between the MOD headquarters and the actual centre of military operations, the Permanent Joint Headquarters in Northwood. It is reported to be connected to Downing Street via tunnels under Whitehall. Although it has been rumoured that it connects to some secret underground transport system, Armed Forces Minister Jeremy Hanley told the House of Commons on 29 April 1994 that "the facility is not connected to any transport system." Although PINDAR is very definitely not open to the public, it has had some very limited public exposure. This came in the 2003 BBC documentary on the Iraq conflict, Fighting the War, in which BBC cameras were allowed into the facility to film a small part of a teleconference between ministers and military commanders.

 

http://illuminati-news.com/111906b.htm

Anonymous ID: cb1480 Dec. 12, 2021, 10:12 a.m. No.15181971   🗄️.is 🔗kun

pharmacy (n.)

late 14c., farmacie, "a medicine that rids the body of an excess of humors (except blood);" also "treatment with medicine; theory of treatment with medicine," from Old French farmacie "a purgative" (13c.) and directly from Medieval Latin pharmacia,

 

from Greek pharmakeia "a healing or harmful medicine, a healing or poisonous herb; a drug, poisonous potion; magic (potion), dye, raw material for physical or chemical processing."

 

This is from pharmakeus (fem. pharmakis) "a preparer of drugs, a poisoner, a sorcerer" from pharmakon "a drug, a poison, philter, charm, spell, enchantment." Beekes writes that the original meaning cannot be clearly established, and "The word is clearly Pre-Greek." The ph- was restored 16c. in French, 17c. in English (see ph).

 

Buck ["Selected Indo-European Synonyms"] notes that "Words for 'poison', apart from an inherited group, are in some cases the same as those for 'drug' …." In addition to the Greek word he has Latin venenum "poison," earlier "drug, medical potion" (source of Spanish veneno, French venin, English venom), and Old English lybb.

 

Meaning "the use or administration of drugs" is from c. 1400; the sense of "art or practice of preparing, preserving, and compounding medicines and dispensing them according to prescriptions" is from 1650s; that of "place where drugs are prepared and dispensed" is recorded by 1833.

 

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

Anonymous ID: cb1480 Dec. 12, 2021, 10:37 a.m. No.15182080   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15182062

coof

noun

A lout; a coward. [Scotch.]

An idiot, or fool.

 

jab (v.)

1813, "to thrust or strike with a point," a Scottish variant of job "to strike, pierce, thrust," from Middle English jobben "to jab, thrust, peck" (c. 1500), a word of unknown origin, perhaps imitative. Related: Jabbed; jabbing.

jab (n.)

1825, "a thrust or poke with the point of something," from jab (v.). Meaning "a punch with the fist" is from 1889. Sense of "injection with a hypodermic needle," once beloved by newspaper headline writers, is from 1914.