Anonymous ID: be96dd March 6, 2022, 2:33 a.m. No.15796159   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>https://voxday.net/2022/03/06/now-do-the-showers/

>https://abc30.com/archive/6666467/

Now Do the Showers

>Posted on March 6, 2022 by VD

How many Holocaust claims need to be publicly proven to be lies by scholars before it is eventually concluded that the general theme itself is, at the very least, a fantastic exaggeration of a historical atrocity?

 

Herman Rosenblat received international attention for his tale about being a hungry little boy in a Nazi concentration camp who was thrown apples every day by a little girl named Roma, on the other side of the fence.

 

Years later, according to the story, Rosenblat met that same girl on a blind date in New York City and proposed to her on the spot.

 

The only problem was, Rosenblat’s story, which he and his wife had been telling for 13 years, was a lie.

 

Six weeks ago Holocaust scholars proved that it was physically impossible for prisoners to approach the fence at the concentration camp where Herman was kept and that Roma’s family was actually 200 miles away at the time.

 

Wednesday, for the first time, Rosenblat spoke out in an exclusive interview with “Good Morning America” to share his side of the story.

 

“It wasn’t a lie,” he told “GMA.” “It was my imagination. And in my imagination, in my mind, I believed it. Even now, I believe it, that she was there and she threw the apple to me. … In my imagination, it was true.”

 

And at what point is it going to occur to people that all of these survivors telling ridiculous stories about their lives in the concentration camps tend to suggest that they, at least, weren’t there to be killed in the first place? After all, scholars have already determined that there was no “rollercoaster of death” at Auschwitz, that four million people didn’t die at Auschwitz, and that no one ever put a bear, an eagle, and a jew in a cage together anywhere on the planet, much less every single day.

 

Imagine if the Japanese had started telling stories like these about their own internments in the United States. Or if any of the vast majority of the other people being held in the same Nazi camps did. Where are all the Polish and Romanian stories about “the trapeze of death”, “the marmot, the snake, and the Slav”, or the mass slaughter that took place in the terrible pillow chambers? Would the world similarly genuflect before their nonsense?

 

And forget the damning forensic evidence and the wooden doors. I figured out that the “showers of death” also had to be a lie when I simply thought for a few seconds about what would be necessary to make it safe for the disposal crew to enter them after a round of executions. After all, it’s easier, safer, faster, less expensive, and much more lethal to simply remove the oxygen from an air-tight chamber than it is to pump it full of poison gas, then purge the gas from it.

Anonymous ID: be96dd March 6, 2022, 3:52 a.m. No.15796350   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6441

>https://voxday.net/2022/03/04/can-confirm/

Can Confirm

>Posted on March 4, 2022 by VD

We do. We absolutely do. Because Christian Nationalism is literally the highest form of civilization ever known to Man. It is the actual West, as opposed to the fake and literally gay version that presently wears its skinsuit to sin parades.

 

Whereas “freedom” is nothing more than subjugation to Satan and “democracy” is nothing more than rule by Satan’s servants. The truth is always better than the lie.

Anonymous ID: be96dd March 6, 2022, 4:35 a.m. No.15796477   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6499 >>6661 >>6728

>>15796432

>>15796446

>notes

Taiwanese scout LV’s potential

Monday, Dec. 9, 1996 | 11:59 a.m.

 

Taiwan is researching whether Las Vegas is a good place to establish computer factories.

 

But at least one roadblock could prevent Las Vegas from becoming the next Silicon Valley.

 

A Taiwanese delegation led by its ambassador to the United States visited with Las Vegas business and political leaders over the weekend to scout potential economic opportunities in Southern Nevada.

 

Headed by Ambassador Jason Hu and Vice Economic Minister Shu-Jou Lee, the delegation spent Friday through Sunday in town at the invitation ofSen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.

 

Hu said if he and his colleagues liked what they saw and heard, it could lead to establishment of Taiwanese computer and food-processing factories here and the use of McCarran International Airport by his country's airlines.

 

"When I met Sen. Reid in Washington, D.C., he expressed hope to bring cooperation and business between our country and your great state," Hu said. "You have a lot of potential. Your tax status provides a lot of incentives, your proximity to California and your land are attractive options."

 

The ambassador stressed, however, that he wouldn't make any rosy promises about his country establishing business ties with Nevada.

 

"It's a date of good will," he said of his visit. "It's not a blind date."

 

Hu is no stranger to Las Vegas. He and his wife came here for their honeymoon in 1974. But this is his first trip back in 22 years.

 

"I'm very impressed with your tremendous growth," he said. "I'm also impressed that the state is trying hard to bring much more business to the state."

 

Taiwanese in general are no strangers to Las Vegas either. Last year, 140,000 of Hu's countrymen visited Las Vegas, more than one-fourth of the 522,000 Taiwanese who journeyed to the United States. About 20,000 natives of Taiwan and Hong Kong also call Las Vegas home.

 

Taiwanese businessmen also are familiar with the city through their participation in the annual Comdex computer trade show.

 

But Lee said one of his biggest concerns about Nevada is availability of qualified manpower for the type of high-technology work his country delivers. More than 10,000 Taiwanese engineers work in Northern California's Silicon Valley, and many were trained at nearby Stanford University or the University of California, Berkeley.

 

"You offer incentives like taxes and land," Lee said. But he later added, "You don't have a Berkeley or a Stanford."

 

Although Taiwanese tourists love to gamble, no legalized gaming exists in their country. Nevada gaming companies, of course, have had an eye on possible expansion throughout the Pacific Rim.

 

Hu said traditional Taiwanese culture frowns upon gambling, but he conceded that some of his country's politicians are trying to change that. He said this is particularly true of residents of Taiwan's Penghu Islands, who want gaming.

 

"Gambling would not be encouraged, but it is a phenomenon that needs to be explored," Hu said. "There are a lot of people from Taiwan who are (casino) customers here."

 

Among those who met with the visiting dignitaries were Lt. Gov. Lonnie Hammargren, state Senate Minority Leader Dina Titus, D-Las Vegas, Clark County Commission Chairwoman Yvonne Atkinson Gates, and Nevada Gaming Commission Chairman Bill Curran.

 

The Taiwanese also met with Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority Executive Director Manny Cortez, Nevada Resort Association President Richard Bunker, home builder Jim Rhodes, andBuck Wong, chairman ofArcata Associates, a North Las Vegas electronics engineering firm.

 

Though Taiwan is the United States' seventh largest trading partner the two countries did $47 billion worth of business in 1995 the Asian country also known as the Republic of China on Taiwan doesn't have formal diplomatic relations with this nation.

 

Though Hu is his nation's ambassador, his official title is representative of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office in the United States. Hu blames the lack of formal diplomatic ties on opposition from the People's Republic of China, otherwise known as mainland China. Hu also blames the mainland for Taiwan's exclusion from the United Nations.

 

Relations between Taiwan and the mainland are chilly at best, with no current dialogue between them. Mainland China aggravated the Taiwanese last year and early this year by conducting military exercises off Taiwan's coast.

 

"We want Taiwan to receive justifiable treatment in the international community," Hu said. "We are the only community in the world that has received discrimination because we've said no to communism. We're not even in the Red Cross or Interpol."

Anonymous ID: be96dd March 6, 2022, 4:41 a.m. No.15796499   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>15796477

 

Buck Wong's wife Aurora went to Wellesley - same as HRC

Star Wars-Democratic Platform

 

From: ASlater aslater@gracelinks.org

Date: Thu, 03 Aug 2000 15:50:22 -0400

 

The attached file contains the names of the delegates to the convention.

 

MEMBERS OF THE 2000 DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL PLATFORM COMMITTEE BY STATE

 

Name City State

Ms.Aurora WongLas Vegas NV

 

Platform may rule out Yucca dumpsite

Benjamin Grove

Tuesday, Aug. 15, 2000 | 11:15 a.m.

 

LOS ANGELES – State Democratic Party members say their national platform delivers a Nevada-friendly message on the issue of nuclear waste disposal in stark contrast to prickly language in the Republicans' plank.

 

The Democrats today were scheduled to officially approve the platform a lengthy statement of philosophy as the Democratic National Convention continues in Los Angeles.

 

Democrats say their plank includes the crucial, specific reference to standards that dictate the level of radiation that could safely be emitted from highly radioactive waste stored deep inside Yucca Mountain, now set by the Environmental Protection Agency. The Department of Energy's 13-year-old plan to bury up to 77,000 tons of nuclear waste in the caverns under Yucca Mountain, in theory at least, could be scrapped because the site may not meet the EPA's strict radiation standards.

 

By contrast, the Republicans' nuclear waste plank simply blasted President Clinton for vetoing a bill this year that would have sped up waste shipments to Nevada ahead of schedule.

 

"The current administration has turned its back on the two sources that provide virtually all of the nation's emission-free power: nuclear and hydro," the Republican platform said. "Meanwhile nuclear plants are choking on waste because the current administration breached its contract to remove it – and then vetoed legislation to store it at a safe, permanent repository for which the taxpayers had already paid $7 billion," referring to Yucca Mountain.

 

The nuclear industry umbrella group, Washington-based Nuclear Energy Institute, "applauded" the Republican language.

 

But Nevada Republican Party director Ryan Erwin said Democrats are making too much of their platform.

 

"Here we've got two presidents who have said they want to put science above politics, and two parties who say they want to put science above politics," Erwin said. "The difference is we really are committed to science over politics, and they are trying to make it a political issue."

 

The sentence that refers to nuclear waste in the Democratic platform was inserted by Las Vegan Aurora Wong, a nonpracticing attorney, who was the only Nevada representative on the 186-member Democratic Party platform committee. The committee met July 5 and 6 in Toledo, Ohio, and July 28 and 29 in Cleveland.

 

She headed to Cleveland with two Nevada-specific goals: insert the words "Lake Tahoe" into a passage on the environment to emphasize a national commitment to the fragile lake; and insert a sentence about nuclear waste disposal. She quickly realized the Lake Tahoe language would never be approved because other delegates would clamor to include their own state's natural wonders.

 

But she lobbied hard for the nuclear waste reference. During a reception the evening of July 28, she chatted up as many delegates as possible around the room. Other delegates were lobbying for their own issues, she said.

 

"Everyone knew that we didn't have a lot of time, and we all had to go back home with something. Everyone was working other people," she said.

 

When it came time the next day to introduce her sentence, dubbed amendment 33, "I got up and made my pitch," Wong said.

 

It passed on voice vote.

 

"It seems to me that is an important sentence to have in place," Wong said. "It does reflect this administration's support for the use of the scientific standards. Since this is the document that Gore is running on, it kind of binds him to this policy if he becomes president."

 

Wong said that other members of the platform committee never would have approved language that blatantly opposed shipping nuclear waste from their states to Nevada.

 

"People don't want nuclear waste in their back yards," Wong said. "If this had been something that did not match Gore's position, it never would have flown."

 

Wong stressed that in the end, the fight of Nevadans against the Yucca Mountain proposal rests with Nevada's members in Congress and the president.

 

"This is not going to be what saves the day," Wong said. "It's going to be the leadership exerted on this issue.">Buck Wong, chairman ofArcata Associates

Anonymous ID: be96dd March 6, 2022, 4:59 a.m. No.15796576   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6642

>>15796446

>Buck Wong, chairman of Arcata Associates

Buck Wong was on 1979 Carter's WH Small Business committee.

Arcata Associates has been an 8(a) SBA recipient ever since.

To this day.

Army.

NASA.

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