Anonymous ID: 11f8ea March 12, 2022, 6:55 a.m. No.15847140   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7350

>>15847055

kekkkkekek

envy loser.

prolly FBI traitors who make money off of shilling here and selling out USA

Andy McABE loves to tool around D.C. in an expensive Porsche.

Their money is dirty

so

they attack Trump about his money -which he worked hard for

in contrast to the grifters.

Including the disgusting shill who work here… mooo-jew ,etc.,

Anonymous ID: 11f8ea March 12, 2022, 6:58 a.m. No.15847159   🗄️.is đź”—kun

who started posting long dramatic movies clips

Is that the new folks from TS?

if so , welcome.

just so you know

i'm unlikely to watch a long drama piece without some summary / liner notes.

Anonymous ID: 11f8ea March 12, 2022, 7:12 a.m. No.15847261   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>7303 >>7321

>>15847151

3 7 is an important day

day of the year POTUS Trump nationalized the FED and folded it into the US Treasury …

and also the day of the year of the Vault 7 release too?

 

37 is an important prime; sort of like the 3 - 6 - 9 series of the tesla numbers;

some physicists have said the secret of the Universe is in 137

 

and 37

237 is famous for the connectin tin th Kubrick film 'The Shining" An whole movie was made on that number "Rm. 237"

 

'What do you think when someone mentions the number 137? Most likely, not much. It’s just one of many numbers, right? To us ordinary people the number 137 doesn’t seem to be of great importance, but to physicists, it’s a very mysterious number that may hold the answers to the universe.

 

Prominent scientists have discussed the significance of number 137 since the 1800s. It has been suggested it can hold the clues to the Grand Unified Theory and unlock some of the greatest secrets of the Universe.

 

The Grand Unified Theory is a vision of a physics theory that can combine three of the four fundamental forces into one single equation.'

 

'Richard Feynman (1918-1988) said we must pay attention to so-called “magic numbers” he said that 137 is “one of the greatest damn mysteries of physics.!

 

Nobel Prize-winning physicist Wolfgang Pauli (1900-1958) spent most of his life trying to solve the riddle of 137.'