Anonymous ID: d0f224 March 25, 2022, 7:14 p.m. No.15945661   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5663 >>5679 >>5733

>>15945644

>This is why John Kerry and Obama controlled ISIS and why they focused on creating a pipeline pathway through Syria.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Iraq%E2%80%93Syria_pipeline

What we donโ€™t hear about often when Syria is discussed are the two competing oil pipelines vying to run through Syria. Both pipelines seek to connect the largest natural gas field in the world, located 3000 meters below the floor of the Persian Gulf, to the gas happy market in Europe. Qatar owns roughly two-thirds of the the mineral rights to the Persian Gulf gas field and Iran owns the other one third. One pipeline starts in Qatar and runs through Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey into Europe. We will call this the Qatar pipeline. 094d5929f2a7da0ec47855659dcc8df8The other pipeline runs from Iran through Iraq and Syria and into the Mediterranean Sea. This we will call the Iranian pipeline.

Both you will notice run through Syria. The first pipeline proposed to Assad was the Qatar pipeline and he rejected the proposal. Assad then later approved the Iranian pipeline, which was expected to be completed in 2016, but the Syrian war disrupted that. Now letโ€™s look at the Syrian war: Russia and Iran are supporting Assad, while the U.S., Saudi Arabia and Turkey are supporting the rebels. So the Qatar pipeline was rejected by Assad and it just so happens that the countries with a vested interest in that pipeline are supporting the rebels. While the countries with an interest in the335809bc5a4500918ff797c8a540c039 pipeline approved by Assad are supporting him. Itโ€™s always about the money.

Anonymous ID: d0f224 March 25, 2022, 7:14 p.m. No.15945663   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5733 >>5800

>>15945661

>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Iraq%E2%80%93Syria_pipeline

Why does Russia have an interest in the Iranian pipeline? Russia is an oil/gas nation. In fact 80 per cent of the gas that Russian state-controlled company Gazprom produces is sold to Europe, so maintaining this crucial market is very important. Russia needs to stay a player in the European market for gas. However, the United States and Europe have been pushing for Europe to decrease their dependency on Russian gas. Russia tends to use itโ€™s gas as a weapon of leverage in international affairs and has a history of cutting off gas to countryโ€™s in conflict. Qatar is home to a U.S. military base, so the idea of a new gas line running from Qatar to supply Europe would be in direct competition with Russia originating in a country unfriendly to Russia. But an Iranian pipeline is a pipeline that Russia can work with as Iran and Russia are friendly. Itโ€™s also worth noting that Saudi Arabia is currently bombing Yemen, a country they would also like to build a pipeline through. Middle East Eye columnist Nafeez Ahmed, citing a 2008 State Department cable from Wikileaks, has confirmed the Saudi interest in building a pipeline that is โ€œwholly owned, operated and protected by Saudi Arabia, through Hadramawt (Yemen) to a port on the Gulf of Aden.โ€ So the mideast is all about pipelines. Looking at mideast affairs through the lens of pipelines starts to clear things up.

Anonymous ID: d0f224 March 25, 2022, 7:29 p.m. No.15945773   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>15945755

>Association of Alice in Wonderland syndrome is most commonly seen with Epstein-Barr virus.

In 1955, English psychiatrist John Todd defined the Alice-in-Wonderland syndrome (AIWS) as self-experienced paroxysmal body-image illusions involving distortions of the size, mass, or shape of the patient's own body or its position in space, often accompanied by depersonalization and/or derealization. AIWS had been described by American Neurologist Caro Lippman in 1952, but Todd's report was the most influential. Todd named the syndrome for the perceptual disorder of altered body image experienced by the protagonist in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865) by Lewis Carroll (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson). In Carroll's original story, Alice experienced several dramatic changes in body size and shape (e.g., shrinking to 10 inches high, growing unnaturally tall but not any wider, and growing unnaturally large). Todd reported 6 cases of AIWS, all of whom had episodic body-image distortions like those experienced by Lewis Carroll's Alice character; some also had visual perceptual disturbances, but none had visual perceptual disorders without body-image distortions. Therefore, AIWS may be accompanied by visual perceptual disorders (e.g., micropsia, macropsia, telopsia, pelopsia), but basing the diagnosis of AIWS on isolated visual perceptual disorders, as has subsequently been done by a number of authors, is inaccurate and misleading. Cases of isolated visual illusions without self-perceived distortions of body size, shape, or form, do not meet Todd's original criteria, nor are they commensurate with the experiences of the protagonist in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland. Furthermore, such cases differ by age and etiology from those that involve somesthetic perceptual disorders. Therefore, the use of the term AIWS for isolated visual illusions is problematic and should be discouraged. Although Todd's and Lippman's cases were adolescents or adults, AIWS is most commonly reported in children. Reported causes include infection (especially with Epstein Barr virus), migraine, epilepsy, depression, and toxic and febrile delirium.