Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:12 a.m. No.16878387   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8618

Anons, there may be a way to both troll the Monkeypox narrative AND Pride Month.

 

Get #PooftaPox or #PridePox viral on social media. Whichever one is funnier.

 

Connect being a depraved faggot with Monkeypox.

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:14 a.m. No.16878510   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8715 >>9491 >>0290 >>0999 >>2678

>>16878109

>>16878383

>>16878126

>>16877951

>>16878277

>>16877908

>>16878133

 

https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/13514117/peter-nygard-girlfriends-abortions-foetuses-sge-stem-cell-research/

Dec 18, 2020

'Paedo’ Peter Nygard ‘wanted girlfriends to have abortions to use foetuses for age-defying stem cell research’

 

PETER Nygard wanted to get his girlfriends pregnant and have abortions so he could use the foetuses for age-defying stem cell research, it was claimed.

 

The revelation comes as the 79-year-old fashion mogul was charged with sex trafficking after he allegedly abused girls as young as 14.

 

US prosecutors demanded his arrest in Canada and he faces extradition on charges of sex assault, racketeering and trafficking.

 

Fifty-seven alleged victims — including a Brit — have also joined ongoing legal action, claiming Nygard used violence, intimidation, bribery and company employees to lure victims.

 

The mogul - who has a net worth of around £700million - strongly denies all the allegations against him.

 

A new book by Melissa Cronin - a copy of which was provided to The Sun Online - makes claims about Nygard alleged bizarre behaviour.

 

In “Predator King: Peter Nygard’s Dark Life of Rape, Drugs and Blackmail” Cronin - who also probed Jeffrey Epstein - she claims Nygard had an obsession with staying young.

 

The tycoon allegedly ended up establishing his stem cell research company on the island of St. Kitts, near his home in the Bahamas.

 

Cronin alleges the purpose was use aborted foetuses from his pregnant girlfriends to provide him with fresh stem cells.

 

“I may be the only person in the world who has my own embryos growing in a petri dish,” he said.

 

An ex-girlfriends, Suelyn Medeiros, wrote in a 2014 memoir about a trip she took with Nygard to Ukraine, where he was having stem cell research done.

 

“He asked, ‘Suelyn, do you know what the best stem cells are?’” she wrote, to which she replied “embryos”.

 

“Correct! If you got pregnant and had an abortion, we could use those embryonic cells and have a life’s supply for all of us: you, your mother and me. A lot of people are doing it,” he replied.

 

According to the book excerpts published in the New York Post, Medeiros says she “was beyond stunned.”

 

“This was the sickest thing I’d ever heard Peter say,” she said.

 

“I couldn’t speak for a moment. Finally, catching my breath, I said, ‘Peter, I do not believe in abortion.’”

 

Nygard would host what he called "Pamper Parties" - often at his private island resort Nygard Cay in the Caribbean.

 

He would allegedly choose out girls for sex and then either force himself upon them, drug them or offer them cash.

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:16 a.m. No.16878630   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16878054

 

I see ovaries, uterus, fallopian tubes, vag, base of spine, pelvis, top of femurs.

 

Jewish matrilineal decent would dovetail with the general concept of Khazarian mafia, Ukraine, goddess type occultism, etc.

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:16 a.m. No.16878645   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9706

IBM Q's housing resembles the Griffith Park observatory's astronomer's monument & sundial

 

https://griffithobservatory.org/exhibits/exterior-exhibits/astronomers-monument-sundial/

 

Astronomers Monument Figures

The six astronomers featured on the monument are among the most influential and important in history. The six figures represent the Greek astronomer Hipparchus (about 125 B.C.), Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543), Galileo Galilei (1564-1642), Johannes Kepler (1571-1630), Isaac Newton (1642-1727), and William Herschel (1738-1822). Albert Einstein was considered for inclusion, but planers ultimately decided it would be inappropriate to feature someone still alive (the monument was completed in 1934; Einstein died in 1955).

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:18 a.m. No.16878763   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9426 >>0561

>>16878723

 

I’m sure anons saw the misspelling, he used “rained in” when its supposed to be “reigned in”

 

Reigned - definition of reigned by The Free Dictionary

reign. ( reɪn) n. 1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) the period during which a monarch is the official ruler of a country. 2. a period during which a person or thing is dominant, influential, or powerful: the reign of violence is over. vb ( intr) 3.

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:20 a.m. No.16878902   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9921

Who is Cassidy Hutchinson?

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cassidy-hutchinson-who-is-january-6-committee-hearing-mark-meadows-former-aid/

 

Cassidy Hutchinson, a former top aide to President Donald's Trump's White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, testified at a House January 6 committee hearing on Tuesday. The unexpected hearing was announced on Monday, with the committee saying it would present "recently obtained evidence" from an unnamed witness who was later revealed to be Cassidy Hutchinson. But who is she?

 

Hutchinson is the committee's first live witness who was in the West Wing on Jan. 6, 2021.

 

"It's important that the American people hear that information immediately," the committee chairman, Rep. Bennie Thompson, said at the start of the hearing, thanking people like Hutchinson for their courage.

 

Hutchinson previously worked for House Republican Whip Rep. Steve Scalise as well as Sen. Ted Cruz, Thompson said at the hearing.

 

She attended Christopher Newport University and spoke to the school about her White House internship in 2018. "I attended numerous events hosted by the president, such as signing ceremonies, celebrations and presidential announcements, and frequently watched Marine One depart the South Lawn from my office window," she said, according to a 2018 article on the school's website, which described her as a "first-generation college student."

 

"My small contribution to the quest to maintain American prosperity and excellence is a memory I will hold as one of the honors of my life," she said

 

Hutchinson was then in her senior year at the university in Newport News, Virginia. She said she planned to head back to Washington, D.C. after graduating — which she did.

 

In 2019, she began a role at the to the White House's legislative affairs office, committee vice chair Rep. Liz Cheney said during Tuesday's hearing. Hutchinson was promoted to principal aide to Trump's chief of staff Mark Meadows in March 2020 and served until the end of the Trump administration.

 

Though still young, like many White House staffers, Cheney said Hutchinson "handled a vast number of sensitive issues" and worked in the West Wing, just steps down the hall from the Oval Office. During the hearing, Hutchinson said in her testimony that she spent a lot of time on Capitol Hill and helped fulfill presidential travel engagements.

 

"Ms. Hutchinson spoke daily with members of Congress, with high ranking officials in the administration, with senior White House staff, including Mr. Meadows, with White House counsel lawyers and with Mr. Tony Ornadt, who served as the deputy chief of [operations]," Cheney said. "She also worked on a daily basis with members of the Secret Service who were posted in the White House"

 

"In short, Ms. Hutchinson was in a position to know a great deal about the happenings in the White House," Cheney continued.

 

One of the first things Hutchinson described during Tuesday's testimony was a conversation between herself and Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani. She said during the conversation on January 2 — days before the Capitol attack — Giuliani "said something to the effect of how we should be excited for the 6th, it will be a great day."

 

She said didn't know exactly what he was talking about, and when she asked Meadows about it later, he "said something to the effect of, 'There's a lot going on. But I don't know, things might get real, real bad on January 6th.'"

 

Hutchinson recently switched lawyers for the hearing. She had been using a former Trump White House official, but is now with Jody Hunt, who worked for the Justice Department and served as chief of staff to former Attorney General Jeff Sessions, according to The Associated Press.

 

Hunt was a key witness for special counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into alleged ties between Russia and the 2016 Trump campaign.

 

Hutchinson has testified for the Jan. 6 committee several times before the public hearing on Tuesday. She testified that Anthony Ornato, a senior Secret Service official who was detailed to the White House and served as deputy chief of operations, brought Meadows intelligence reports that "indicated that there could be violence on the 6th," but she was not sure what he did with the information internally.

 

In another interview, she testified about White House meetings with several Republican members of Congress, at which a plan to have alternate electors meet and cast votes for Trump in states he lost was discussed, and that the White House counsel's office said such a plan was not legally sound.

Anonymous ID: 030ea1 July 28, 2022, 12:21 a.m. No.16878974   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9602 >>9918 >>0600 >>1160

>>16878697

 

To me, two days ahead of schedule would be the 22nd. On that day I experienced a form of 11.3 when two Ravens came within arms reach and landed on two signs, each one about my shoulders as I testified to strangers about John the Baptist/Elijah.

 

No one here showed interest to hear that discourse but when someone actually listened, God sent signs for them. When I relayed this story to the board yet again, no interest. Yet on that day another Raven player had died. Who could have known and seen these things coming except God himself?

 

Anyone analyzed posts from Q team regarding any of this? Maybe they verified the story and looked at the surveillance videos.

 

FYI

 

Early Origins of the Nolte family

The surname Nolte was first found in Prussia, where the name emerged in medieval times as one of the notable families of the region. From the 13th century the surname was identified with the great social and economic evolution which made this territory a landmark contributor to the development of the nation.