Anonymous ID: 21cb25 May 24, 2022, 5:09 a.m. No.16332093   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2098

>>16332087

Watters hero was Michel Jackson

some1s hero was Michel Jordan

some1s hero was Buzz Aldrin

>[biden]

we all know how those turned out

5 ways [they] are trying to save the presidency

1: don't believe your lying eyes but the 'metrics' SHOW dif

Anonymous ID: 21cb25 May 24, 2022, 5:23 a.m. No.16332130   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2135 >>2138 >>2139

>Time to move on.

1343 12-May-2018 6:16:10 PM

'They attempted to infiltrate, repackage & rebrand as their own.

Profit-vehicle.

Destroy through [misinformation].

Absorb the 'confused'.

Re-route traffic to other platforms.

Action was needed [2].

  1. Prevent false decodes/misinformation

  2. Kill [targeted] infection prior to expansion

Simple 'non-direct' statements made.

"Be careful who you follow."

"Some are profiting off this movement."

Message sent.

Message received.

Those guilty immediately reacted (predictably).

Timetable accelerated (misinformation-attack).

Exposed.

Attempts to divide.

We responded.

House cleaning.

Heal [core].

Important to clean prior to next events.

The choice has always been yours.

The choice will always be yours.

This is not a game.

This is not a popularity contest.

This is LIFE.

FREEDOM.

TOGETHER.

We, the PEOPLE.

WWG1WGA.

[Time to move on]

Dark to LIGHT.

Attacks will only get worse.

Truth is Freedom.

Truth is logic.

Stay the course.'

Anonymous ID: 21cb25 May 24, 2022, 5:31 a.m. No.16332156   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16332154

>4/17/2017 2:42pm

'A defense lawyer for radio host Alex Jones said in a Texas child custody hearing that the prominent right-wing conspiracy theorist is a "performance artist."

 

According to The Austin American-Statesman, attorney Randall Wilhite said in a pretrial hearing that Jones' angry rants against the government should not be used against him in the case.

 

Wilhite likened the idea to focusing on Jack Nicholson's performance as The Joker in "Batman" to make a point about the star actor's character.

 

"Heโ€™s playing a character. He is a performance artist," Wilhite said about Jones, who is battling his ex-wife, Kelly Jones, over the custody of their three children.

 

Jury selection in the case is starting today.

 

Kelly Jones argued that Jones' statements on his Infowars broadcasts show him to be "unstable" and make him unfit to be a parent.

 

She also called out his expletive-laced rant from two weeks ago in which he threatened Democrat U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff (CA) and used homophobic slurs.

 

Jones has millions listeners and has been criticized for perpetuating conspiracy theories about 9/11 and the Sandy Hook school shootings and for helping to start the Pizzagate fake news controversy.

 

Watch the legal discussion about the case on "Happening Now" above.

Anonymous ID: 21cb25 May 24, 2022, 5:35 a.m. No.16332165   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>2203

Sharyl Attkisson

@SharylAttkisson

32m

ยท

(WATCH) Shorting Seniors

 

https://sharylattkisson.com/2022/05/watch-shorting-seniors/

 

'A Michigan widow loses $30,000 to Geek Squad imposters. A Florida man defrauds a widow of $1 million in insurance money.

 

And then there are the romance scams.

 

AARP video: They might share a hard luck story and ask you to send money or perhaps a gift card to help pay a bill.

 

The image of widows getting cheated is a stereotype for good reason. But wait until you hear whoโ€™s been cheating thousands of widows out of millions of dollars, according to John McAdams.

 

John McAdams: My mother was an elderly widow, how can you knowingly cheat elderly widows?

 

McAdams says it starts when the Social Security Administration, where heโ€™s a claims authorizer, makes contact with a new widow.

 

McAdams: A person calls up, or meets in person at the time, for their survivor benefits, and it sounds like a good thing: "Hey, I can sign you up for your retirement benefits and your widow's benefits."

 

A widow signing up for survivor's benefits and her own retirement benefits at the same time is called โ€œdual enrollment." And too often, McAdams says, itโ€™s not a good thing.

 

McAdams: It could be men, but it's typically widows โ€” women โ€” who applied for survivor benefits, and their claims were set up incorrectly. And, as a result, they've lost money for years, and they continue to lose hundreds of dollars every month.

 

How the Social Security Administration, which is supposed to help give financial security for Americaโ€™s elderly, could be cheating widows, is complicated.

 

The way Social Security works, if a husband and wife are both collecting Social Security and one of them dies, the survivor gets the bigger of the two checks. But what if the surviving spouse wasnโ€™t on Social Security? What if they were waiting? After all, for every year you wait after youโ€™re eligible, your future benefit grows in the background by 8% until you're age 70.

 

For many, the best financial decision is for a widow to take her deceased spouseโ€™s check, while letting her own future payment grow in the background, and then switch over when it's maxed out.

 

Sharyl: What happens when that person โ€” who's getting the benefit of their passed away loved one โ€” when that person reaches, say, age 70?

 

McAdams: They can check if their own retirement benefit is higher than what they're getting as a survivor. And if it's set up correctly, they can apply for it and enjoy those benefits for the rest of their life. ..'