Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:45 a.m. No.17401875   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1879 >>1895 >>2093 >>2253

Shanghai - Ikea shoppers flee attempt to lock down store

‘There were chaotic scenes at an Ikea store in Shanghai on Saturday, with shoppers trying to escape as authorities tried to quarantine them.

Health officials were attempting to lock the store in Xuhui district down as a customer had been in close contact with a positive Covid case.

Videos show the guards closing the doors at one point, but a crowd forced them open and made their escape.’

 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-china-62547503

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:48 a.m. No.17401883   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1894 >>1895 >>1927 >>2093 >>2253

>>17401758

 

https://www.forbes.com/sites/ericmack/2022/08/15/a-dark-plasma-explosion-on-the-sun-may-trigger-a-geomagnetic-storm-this-week/?sh=f712b77391b8

 

A ‘Dark Plasma Explosion’ On The Sun May Trigger A Geomagnetic Storm Tomorrow

 

After a few relatively quiet weeks, our neighborhood star is restless again. The sun has unleashed a series of medium-strength solar flares, while also sending a coronal mass ejection and a stream of speedy solar wind our way.

 

Put together it all means that the sun is currently erupting in just about every way that we’re aware of this week, increasing the chances that when all those charged particles reach us, they’ll make their arrival known in the form of a geomagnetic storm.

 

Some of this activity is already being felt on Earth. A trio of M-class flares was unleashed by a growing sunspot on Monday. Because the energy from flares travels at the speed of light, it reached our planet within minutes, causing some shortwave radio blackouts noticed by pilots, mariners and other radio operators over the Atlantic Ocean and North America, according to Spaceweather.com.

 

MORE FROM FORBESAn Increasingly Active Sun Is Now Producing Solar 'Tsunamis' And Sending Flares Our WayBy Eric Mack

But the slower-moving coronal mass ejection (CME), which was thrown off from the sun’s atmosphere by a dark plasma explosion, could give our magnetic field a sort of glancing high five in passing on Wednesday and Thursday, according to NASA and NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center.

 

Astronomer Tony Phillips described the event as the sun hurling “a plume of cool, dark plasma into space following an explosion around sunspot AR3076.”

 

NASA captured this week's ″dark plasma explosion.″

NASA captured this week's "dark plasma explosion."

 

NASA / Spaceweather.com

“Traveling faster than 600 km/s (1.3 million mph), the plume tore through the sun's outer atmosphere, creating a coronal mass ejection (CME),” he adds.

 

The cosmic sideswipe could cause a minor to moderate geomagnetic storm when it collides with Earth’s magnetosphere, potentially disrupting satellite and other communications and creating bright auroras visible at lower than normal latitudes.

 

The sunspot that produced that dark plasma explosion, which is labeled AR3076, is a bit unusual in that its polarity is the reverse of about 97 percent of all other sunspots.

 

NASA created a magnetic map of the sunspot that Phillips says “shows opposite polarities jostling together—an explosive mix that could trigger strong (even X-class) solar flares.”

 

All this celestial drama at the center of our solar system could just be the beginning. The sun is currently in a period of intensifying sunspot activity as it builds to the peak of its 25th solar cycle. The sun has gone through that many of the roughly 11-year cycles since astronomers started tracking them in the 1700s.

 

At some point in between 2023 and 2025, the number of sunspots — which are tied to most flares, CMEs and the other ways that the sun could potentially disrupt life on earth — will peak at what’s called solar maximum and then began to fall off to a solar minimum period during which the face of the sun of blank. Then the cycle starts all over again.

 

There are conflicting predictions out there about whether this solar cycle, which officially started a few years ago, will be of below average intensity or one of the most active on record.

 

So far, a relatively hyperactive sun is trending toward the latter prediction being correct, which means we could be in for a bumpy ride, geomagnetically speaking.

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:52 a.m. No.17401893   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1905 >>1922

United States Overnight Repo Rate

 

https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/repo-rate

 

The overnight rate is the interest rate at which a depository institution (generally banks) lends or borrows funds from another depository institution in the overnight market. In many countries, the overnight rate is the interest rate the central bank sets to target monetary policy.

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:55 a.m. No.17401899   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Texxtyle

@texxtyle

5G Streetlights are microwaving you in your home. This new weaponized technology that is making people sick.

 

https://twitter.com/texxtyle/status/1559330379005415427

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:56 a.m. No.17401901   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1902 >>2093 >>2253

Trump Organization chief expected to plead guilty in tax evasion case

 

The Times, citing two people with knowledge of the matter, said Weisselberg was expected to receive a five-month jail sentence, which would make him eligible for release after about 100 days. The deal would not require Weisselberg to testify or cooperate in any way with an ongoing criminal investigation into Trump’s business practices.

 

Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, is also charged in the case but did not appear to be involved in the plea agreement talks. Weisselberg and the Trump Organization has pleaded not guilty.

 

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/aug/15/allen-weisselberg-trump-organization-tax-evasion-case

 

Allen Weisselberg has been accused of taking more than $1.7m from the company, including rent, car payments and school tuition

 

Donald Trump’s longtime finance chief is expected to plead guilty as soon as Thursday in a tax evasion case that is the only criminal prosecution to arise from a long-running investigation into the former president’s company, three people familiar with the matter told the Associated Press.

 

Allen Weisselberg, CFO of the Trump Organization, was scheduled to be tried in October on allegations he took more than $1.7m in off-the-books compensation from the company, including rent, car payments and school tuition.

 

The judge overseeing the case, Juan Manuel Merchan, scheduled a hearing for Thursday but did not say why. The people who spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity said the purpose of Thursday’s hearing was for Weisselberg to enter a guilty plea, but cautioned that plea deals sometimes fall apart before they are finalized in court.

 

Weisselberg’s lawyer, Nicholas Gravante Jr, told the New York Times on Monday that Weisselberg has been engaged in plea negotiations to resolve the case, but did not specify terms of a potential plea deal. Reached by the AP, Gravante declined to comment.

 

The Times, citing two people with knowledge of the matter, said Weisselberg was expected to receive a five-month jail sentence, which would make him eligible for release after about 100 days. The deal would not require Weisselberg to testify or cooperate in any way with an ongoing criminal investigation into Trump’s business practices.

 

pt 1

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 5:57 a.m. No.17401902   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2093 >>2253

>>17401901

Trump’s company, the Trump Organization, is also charged in the case but did not appear to be involved in the plea agreement talks. Weisselberg and the Trump Organization has pleaded not guilty.

 

The Manhattan district attorney’s office declined comment. A message seeking a comment was left with a lawyer for the Trump Organization.

 

News of Weisselberg’s plea negotiations came days after the judge denied requests by his lawyers and the Trump Organization to throw out the case.

 

Weisselberg, who turned 75 on Monday, is the only Trump executive charged in the years-long criminal investigation started by Cyrus Vance Jr, the former Manhattan district attorney, who went to the supreme court to secure Trump’s tax records. Vance’s successor, Alvin Bragg, is now overseeing the investigation.

 

Prosecutors alleged that Weisselberg and the Trump Organization schemed to give off-the-books compensation to senior executives, including Weisselberg, for 15 years. Weisselberg alone was accused of defrauding the federal government, state and city out of more than $900,000 in unpaid taxes and undeserved tax refunds.

 

The most serious charge against Weisselberg, grand larceny, carried a potential penalty of five to 15 years in prison. The tax fraud charges against the company are punishable by a fine of double the amount of unpaid taxes, or $250,000, whichever is larger.

 

Trump has not been charged in the criminal investigation probe, but prosecutors have noted that he signed some of the checks at the center of the case. Trump, who has decried the New York investigations as a “political witch hunt”, has said his company’s actions were standard practice in the real estate business and in no way a crime.

 

Last week, Trump sat for a deposition in the New York attorney general Letitia James’ parallel civil investigation into allegations Trump’s company misled lenders and tax authorities about asset values. Trump invoked his fifth amendment protection against self-incrimination more than 400 times.

2 of 2

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 6:08 a.m. No.17401931   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1989

https://twitter.com/_/status/1559238537413033984

 

Libs of TikTok

@libsoftiktok

Non-binary teacher explains “kids brains are more elastic” and that’s how “they” get students to use they/them pronouns and the Mx honorific

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 7:16 a.m. No.17402205   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2253

Jay Bhattacharya

@DrJBhattacharya

Great news! Santa Clara county public health has persecuted Calvary Chapel the whole pandemic, slapping millions in fines on the church and hundreds of thousands on the pastor. The government should not be able to bankrupt a church for exercising its 1st amendment rights.

Quote Tweet

Mark Meuser for U.S. Senate

@MarkMeuser

 

US Senate candidate, CA

· 10h

Breaking News:

 

Today a CA Appeals court overturned over $300k in sanctions issued against Calvery Chapel San Jose for not shutting down during COVID.

 

The government could not shut them down because of 1st Amendment, so a judge could not sanction for refusing to obey the order.

 

https://mobile.twitter.com/DrJBhattacharya/status/1559399259304169472

Anonymous ID: f7d9d3 Aug. 16, 2022, 7:22 a.m. No.17402231   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2310 >>2330

>>17402197

  1. you come everyday, and post signs and symbols. - anons recognize patterns and decrypt the connections of those relationships

  2. you keep secrets. - anons reveal all they can

  3. you swear oaths. - anons are whole, not divided UNDER things, groups, oaths, secrets, or covenants

 

Kings and Popes you refer to are HUMAN TRADING SLAVERS. There is no such thing as a king without slaves, as one defines the other.

 

No such thing as a pope without a flock of sheep, as again, one defines the other.

 

You support that rank and order, we do not.

 

You wear costumes and symbols, we do not.