Anonymous ID: 43b2ad April 21, 2022, 11:18 a.m. No.16121941   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1964

>>16121918

>The United States alone has provided 10 anti-armor systems for every one Russian tank that is in Ukraine.

 

'firmed: Zjew is selling 'em. no way that there could still be Russian tanks with 10:1 ratio of American supplied alone

Anonymous ID: 43b2ad April 21, 2022, 11:20 a.m. No.16121965   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2038

>>16121933

Over the weekend I was reading a story in the Wall Street Journal about the history of the anti-vaccination movement when I came across a familiar name: Raggedy Ann. Here’s what the author, NYU historian David Oshinsky, had to say:

 

Historians generally trace the anti-vaccine movement to a number of 19th-century groups, including religious activists, radical libertarians and health faddists, who insisted that [Edward] Jenner’s vaccine actually caused smallpox. Like some current movement activists, these early leaders had a personal story to tell, claiming that a vaccine had harmed or even killed someone close to them, most often a child. Indeed, their most visible symbol was the smiling but entirely limp Raggedy Ann doll created by a popular cartoonist for his daughter, who had fallen ill and would later die, he believed, from a smallpox shot she received without his permission.

 

I didn’t have a Raggedy Ann doll when I was little, but I had Raggedy Ann books, written and illustrated by one Johnny Gruelle. The one I especially remember was called Raggedy Ann’s Lucky Pennies. What I mostly remember about it was that it was dark and deeply weird.

 

https://www.phillymag.com/news/2015/02/23/strange-link-raggedy-ann-anti-vaxxers/