Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:41 a.m. No.17382574   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3177 >>3248

https://twitter.com/roller2426/status/1557676354703081472

 

Badabing.. Rolla

@roller2426

Lots of fresh Graves (92 to be exact) in one small town in NZ.

 

What the hell is going on?

 

Coincidences I guess.

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:43 a.m. No.17382580   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Coca-Cola announces new "Dreamworld" flavor

 

Presenting the new Coca-Cola Dreamworld, which "bottles up the technicolor tastes and surrealism of the subconscious with an invitation to savor the magic of everyday moments and dream with open eyes," according to a press release.

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:44 a.m. No.17382583   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3177 >>3248

Three major cruise brands to drop Covid vaccine rule from September

 

https://www.msn.com/en-gb/lifestyle/travel/three-major-cruise-brands-to-drop-covid-vaccine-rule-from-september/ar-AA10ABND

 

Three cruise brands will drop their requirement for passengers to show proof of Covid vaccination from next month.

 

Norwegian, Regent Seven Seas, and Oceania – three of the largest brands in the Norwegian Cruise Line (NCL) Holdings fleet – said they will be the first US-based cruise firms to enact this rule change from 3 September.

 

During the coronavirus pandemic, it was compulsory for all guests over the age of five to show proof of having been jabbed.

 

In less than a month’s time, unvaccinated travellers aged 12 and over will only have to show proof of a negative rapid antigen or PCR test, taken professionally within 72 hours of the ship setting sail.

 

Those who are vaccinated can embark on the cruise ship without a pre-departure Covid test.

 

Frank Del Rio, CEO and president of Miami-based NCL, said in a statement: “Our long-awaited revisions to our testing and vaccination requirements bring us closer in line with the rest of society, which has learned to adapt and live with Covid-19, and makes it simpler and easier for our loyal guests to cruise on our three best-in-class brands.”

 

A fourth firm – Royal Caribbean has announced that it will no longer demand full vaccination from 5 September for passengers on some routes: namely those from Los Angeles, Galveston in Texas, New Orleans in Louisiana, and any of its European ports.

 

However, passengers looking to disembark in the Grand Cayman – the largest island in the Cayman Islands – will need to be fully vaccinated, while those looking to get off in Greece or Spain will need to take a Covid test, the company said.

 

This month, Royal Caribbean was one of the three firms – including Carnival Cruise Lines and MSC Cruises – to relax testing requirements for vaccinated passengers on short voyages.

 

Also earlier this month, Virgin Voyages eliminated the need for pre-boarding Covid tests for vaccinated passengers.

 

The changes come after the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention officially ended its pandemic rules for cruise ships by allowing the Conditional Sail Order to lapse in July.

 

Meanwhile, the first cruise ship to reach New Zealand since the start of the pandemic in early 2020 docked in Auckland on Friday after remaining travel restrictions – including those imposed on maritime arrivals – were lifted last month.

 

The Pacific Explorer ship operated by Carnival Australia has been on a 12-day return trip to Fiji that departed from Sydney. The 2,000 passengers and crew were greeted with a Maori welcome at a reception event attended by PM Jacinda Ardern.

 

Passengers arriving in New Zealand via international cruise ships will still be required to be fully vaccinated – with their latest jab at least 14 days before embarking on the vessel – but they will not need to complete a Covid test on arrival.

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:46 a.m. No.17382588   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2593 >>3177 >>3248

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/aug/12/drought-declared-england-hosepipe-ban-water-restrictions

 

Drought declared across eight areas of England

 

Expert group declares official drought amid prolonged dry spell, meaning water rationing may take place

 

A drought has been declared across wide swathes of England after a meeting of experts.

 

The prolonged dry conditions, with some areas of the country not receiving significant rainfall all summer, have caused the National Drought Group to declare an official drought.

 

The Environment Agency has moved into drought in eight of its 14 areas: Devon and Cornwall, Solent and South Downs, Kent and south London, Herts and north London, East Anglia, Thames, Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire, and the east Midlands.

 

Documents seen by the Guardian show the Environment Agency expects a further two areas will move into drought later in August. These are Yorkshire and West Midlands.

 

The group met earlier this summer to discuss the lack of rainfall and decided to put the country in “prolonged dry weather status”, the first of four emergency dry weather stages, and one step before drought. Now, the country has been tipped into that second stage.

 

This means water rationing may take place across the country, with fewer barriers for water companies who wish to ban customers from using hosepipes and washing the car with tap water. More severe measures can also be put in place at this stage, including banning the use of sprinklers the cleaning of buildings, vehicles and windows.

 

So far this year hosepipe bans have been implemented by Southern Water and South East Water. Welsh Water will implement a ban from 19 August, and Yorkshire Water from 26 August. Thames Water has also said it is “ready to go” with a hosepipe ban.

 

Those in the meeting were shown harrowing statistics about England’s food security. Half of the potato crop is expected to fail as it cannot be irrigated, and even crops that are usually drought tolerant such as maize have been failing.

 

The group was told “irrigation options are diminishing with reservoirs being emptied fast”, and losses of between 10% and 50% are expected for crops including carrots, onions, sugar beet, apples and hops. Milk production is also down nationally due to a lack of food for cows, and wildfires are putting large areas of farmland at risk.

 

Farmers are deciding whether to drill crops for next year, and there are concerns that many will decide not to, with dire consequences for the 2023 harvest.

 

The government was keen to stress that essential water supplies for households are not at risk.

 

Parched fields and meadows in Finedon, Northamptonshire

Water minister Steve Double said: “We are currently experiencing a second heatwave after what was the driest July on record for parts of the country. Action is already being taken by the government and other partners including the Environment Agency to manage the impacts. All water companies have reassured us that essential supplies are still safe, and we have made it clear it is their duty to maintain those supplies.

 

The group contains representatives from water companies, the Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), the Environment Agency (EA), the National Farmers’ Union, Natural England, CCW, Ofwat, Water UK and the Drinking Water Inspectorate, as well as the Angling Trust and the Rivers Trust.

 

While previous dry summers have been offset by wet autumns, meaning the worst effects on water supply have not hit, those present at the meeting were told that was unlikely to be the case this year, with arid conditions predicted to continue due to climate breakdown.

 

Slides from the EA say: “An increased chance of warm conditions through August to October is consistent with an increased westerly flow from warmer than average seas, and our warming climate. With a typical north-west (wetter) to south-east (drier) gradation in rainfall most likely, there are no strong signals for a significant amelioration of current dry conditions.”

 

Catherine Sefton, a hydrologist at the UK Centre for Ecology and Hydrology, said: “In the south-east of England, the continued dry weather means that many river flows remain notably or exceptionally low, and hydrological forecasts suggest this situation will persist over the next few months.

 

“Where river flows are supported by groundwater that recharges during the winter months, the impact of dry weather is reduced. But a continuation of below average rainfall into a second winter would likely result in serious hydrological and environmental drought, with further intensification of the water supply restrictions and fish rescues that we are starting to see in the south-east.”

 

pt 1

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:47 a.m. No.17382593   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17382588

 

The last time a drought was announced was in 2018,. Though research has not yet been conducted to determine whether this year’s drought was caused by climate breakdown, the dry conditions and extreme heat in 2018 were found by the Met Office to have been made 30 times more likely by climate change.

 

There have been five consecutive months of below average rainfall across all geographic regions in England and above average temperatures. River flows, groundwater levels and reservoir stocks all decreased during July. Thirteen EA monitored indicator rivers are at the lowest levels ever recorded and soil moisture deficit is comparable to that seen at the end of the 1976 drought.

 

Scotland and Wales have similar drought reaction groups, which are also understood to be meeting this summer after drier than usual conditions.

 

2 of 2

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:48 a.m. No.17382594   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://rumble.com/embed/v1cqych/

 

https://rumble.com/v1fd49f-cnn-visibly-terrified-fbi-raid-may-actually-help-trump.html

 

CNN Visibly Terrified FBI Raid May Help Trump

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:51 a.m. No.17382607   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2609 >>2616 >>3177 >>3248

https://freebeacon.com/biden-administration/biden-no-guns-for-weed-smokers/

 

Biden: No Guns for Weed Smokers

 

The Biden administration is defending a federal ban on gun-ownership for medical marijuana users, urging a federal judge to dismiss a challenge to the statute.

 

Medical marijuana users should be prohibited from owning guns because the substance impairs the "judgment, cognition, and physical coordination" of those under its influence, lawyers for the Justice Department argued. Florida agricultural commissioner Nikki Fried (D.) is spearheading the lawsuit against the government for its prohibition on people who consume cannabis products with a prescription from owning firearms.

 

"I'm suing the Biden administration because people's rights are being limited," the commissioner said in April after filing the suit. "Medical marijuana is legal. Guns are legal. This is about people's rights and their freedoms to responsibly have both."

 

The administration's stance stands in contrast to President Joe Biden's rhetoric on marijuana. Biden has endorsed decriminalization and argued the federal government shouldn’t interfere with state affairs when it comes to marijuana laws.

 

The Biden administration’s inconsistent stance on the drug mirrors that of Vice President Kamala Harris. As California attorney general, Harris was responsible for locking up thousands for marijuana-related crimes, the Washington Free Beacon reported in 2019. That same year, as she was running for president, she said she was pre-disposed to like smoking marijuana due to her Jamaican heritage. The comment drew stern criticism from her father, who said she was stereotyping people on the island.

 

Most Americans support both the legalization of medical marijuana and the private ownership of firearms. Ninety-one percent of Americans believe that weed should be legal in some form, according to a Pew Research Center poll.

 

Reason magazine pointed out that the Justice Department's argument citing marijuana's effect on the mind "could be applied to many legal drugs" such as alcohol or prescription opioids that are legal for gun-owners to consume.

 

In its motion to dismiss the lawsuit, the Justice Department cited historical disarmament of "groups deemed dangerous," such as 17th-century Catholics and American Indians, as precedent for the practice of preventing certain groups from owning weapons.

 

Fried is running in the Democratic primary to challenge Republican governor Ron DeSantis in November. Fried and the governor appear to be on the same page regarding medical marijuana users' Second Amendment rights.

 

"Floridians should not be deprived of a constitutional right for using a medication lawfully," DeSantis's office said.

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 9:55 a.m. No.17382617   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2648 >>3225 >>3233

https://twitter.com/_/status/1557439495187881984

 

Libs of TikTok

@libsoftiktok

🚨 Licensed counselor and sex therapist advocates for “MAPs” (minor attracted persons). She says they are “vilified” and “marginalized” and shouldn’t be referred to as pedophiles

 

Libs of TikTok

@libsoftiktok

·

Aug 10

Replying to

@libsoftiktok

This licensed therapist works for

@PennsylvaniaGov

in the Department of Corrections

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 10:08 a.m. No.17382675   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2775

>>17382661

>>17382663

 

Indeed.

covid used to test and identify compliance, level and type of resistance.

 

prepare and adapt for global mandates for monkeypox, nipah, marburg, polio, smallpox, or some other 5g-trigged dormant passengers in the vaxx'd, and those around said shedders.

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 10:55 a.m. No.17382821   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2834

>>17382784

anything less than full 100% disclosure is a win for deception, the enemy.

 

EVERYTHING, including patents, state secrets, real history, vatican archives, smithsonian and international counterparts, museum and rare book hidden collections, private collections, etc

 

>>16397076(pb)

Anonymous ID: 96ce8e Aug. 12, 2022, 11:14 a.m. No.17382906   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17382844

war has been a perpetual state of earth since the first colonization.

war is an accurate description of your current existence. Depop is a state of your current existence.

TRUTH is worth everything, even BILLIONS of lives 'lost'.

 

If you do not serve truth, what do you serve? (rhetorical)