Anonymous ID: 1c14f2 Aug. 8, 2022, 6:35 p.m. No.17268650   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8710 >>1254

>>17268617

Gatekeeping and weeding through the BS.

A Trump "manifesto" Showed up her from the pols last night and I choose not to note it. Next bread the real statement came out, with multiple verified sources, and it turned out to be a good call on my part.

However, minutes b4 the real drop, I was wondering if I missed the latest by gatekeeping. Turns out I was right… that time.

Anonymous ID: 1c14f2 Aug. 8, 2022, 6:38 p.m. No.17268789   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8884 >>8958 >>9749 >>0124 >>2560

>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-uZDCDdrEDQ

 

Who Killed Jane Stanford?

>805 views | Jun 26, 2022

 

Penetrating the fog of the coverup surrounding the murder of Stanford University's cofounder, historian Richard White deftly sifts through the evidence and reconstructs the full story. In 1885 Jane Stanford and her husband, Leland Stanford, co-founded Stanford University in memory of their deceased son. After Leland's death in 1893, Jane steered the university and its policies into eccentricity and controversy for more than a decade. When she died in 1905, her vast fortune was still the university’s lifeline.

 

 

To foreclose challenges to her bequests, Stanford's president and his allies insisted it was death by natural causes. But it was a murder, by strychnine poisoning, and the culprit walked. Against a backdrop of San Francisco’s machine politics, corrupt policing, tong wars, and heated newspaper rivalries, White’s search for the murderer will draw you into Stanford’s imperious household and the tumultuous politics at the university. And he reveals that, although several suspects had both motive and opportunity, only one had the means.

 

 

SPEAKERS

 

 

Richard White

 

Margaret Byrne Professor Emeritus, Stanford University; Author, Who Killed Jane Stanford?: A Gilded Age Tale of Murder, Deceit, Spirits, and the Birth of a University

 

 

In Conversation With George Hammond

 

Author, Conversations With Socrates

 

 

This program is part of our Good Lit series, underwritten by the Bernard Osher Foundation.