Anonymous ID: f3cdea Oct. 7, 2022, 7:58 p.m. No.17663879   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17663611

 

The Baphomet statue from Bohemian Grove is a reflection in the Owl's eye.

 

Does anyone over the image of a man in a blindfold playing piano and behind him looks like masonic or Bohemian people? Could have been an old b&w..

 

I need to show it to a friend whose Bible Study teacher played piano at the Bohemian Grove and his father did before him.

 

Much abliged good men.

Anonymous ID: f3cdea Oct. 7, 2022, 8:01 p.m. No.17664119   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4353

WTF WTF

 

U.S. House of Reps. votes 226-194 to criminalize disassembling, cleaning, and re-assembling your gun without a firearm manufacturer’s license, including 8 Republicans!

6:41 PM · Jun 8, 2022·Twitter Web App

 

https://twitter.com/GunOwners/status/1534666918820466691

Anonymous ID: f3cdea Oct. 7, 2022, 8:02 p.m. No.17664222   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17663653

>BREAKING: The Pennsylvania State Senate has introduced legislation to ban gender ideology in the K-5

 

Expect the Lame Duck veto:

 

May 25, 2022:

Man with a ban: How Gov. Tom Wolf’s veto tally is defining his legacy

With the exception of a flurry of COVID-related vetoes in 2020, Wolf’s use of this executive power has been remarkably consistent.

 

"Going into his final full year in office, Wolf had already vetoed 54 bills and resolutions. With a handful of vetoes in 2022, Wolf has the most vetoes of any governor in more than four decades, surpassing fellow Democrat Robert P. Casey’s tally of 50 during his tenure from 1987 to 1995.

 

With Republicans holding the majority in the General Assembly during his entire tenure, Wolf’s vetoes have become the norm – never more so than during the pandemic, when he was at odds with the legislature over COVID-19 business closures and emergency powers. More than a third of Wolf’s vetoes took place during 2020, with Republicans failing to garner the two-thirds majority needed to override any of them.

 

Take a look at the governor’s vetoes over the years and how they’ve changed – or kept in place – the laws of our land."

 

Sauce/moar: https://www.cityandstatepa.com/politics/2022/05/man-ban-how-gov-tom-wolfs-veto-tally-defining-his-legacy/367386/

Anonymous ID: f3cdea Oct. 7, 2022, 8:04 p.m. No.17664381   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17663101

Why the West imposed sanctions on the Russian Federation and how it will affect the aviation industry

 

Changing a supplier like VSMPO-Avisma would be very difficult and very expensive. The cost of the decision is so high that neither Airbus nor Boeing has released approximate figures so far.

 

It was reported the other day that Boeing (which suspended titanium purchases indefinitely in March. - Approx. Life) allegedly ordered titanium from Japan and found an alternative supplier. But after a closer look, it turned out that what he ordered from Japan was not a finished product, but a sponge titanium, that is, something that still needs to be processed, which means additional costs.

 

For its processing, huge electrolytic furnaces are required. For stamping parts, a powerful multi-layer press is required (there is a press at VSMPO-Avisma with a pressure of 75,000 tons. - approx. life), and then the parts are stamped. There are large milling machines, and then these parts are machined, and they are ground. Finishing after machining.

 

Not to say too much, in principle, it is problematic for a country to master the entire technology chain. If it succeeds, the production cost will be so high that it is difficult to buy products. Titanium sponge is not buried in the ground - you must first extract ilmenite (a mineral derived from titanium and iron oxide), melt it in mining and processing plants, and then process it. The ilmenite mining and dressing enterprise is located in the Tomsk region and develops the Tugan ilmenite zirconium sand deposit. According to experts, the available reserves there will last for 80 years.

 

The second largest titanium mine is located in the Tambov region. Currently, Soviet and post-Soviet logistics have been rebuilt, with the largest suppliers of ilmenite at the time being Chile, Australia, China and Ukraine. After 2014, ilmenite began to be actively sourced in Senegal and South Africa. In the 2010s, Russia shifted its focus to developing its own ilmenite reserves. We are second only to China in terms of numbers.

 

Today, no other manufacturer in the world can control the entire production chain with such precision. Even at VSMPO-Avisma, everything is structured: VSMPO works on titanium smelting, Avisma works on stamped products.

 

Russia has managed to establish this vertical integration, which makes the titanium embargo meaningless. Potentially, if Airbus or Boeing start working with other titanium companies, they will face the risk of inevitable costs, higher purchase prices, etc., and eventually return them to Russia.

 

Attempts are not torture, or why the West doesn't want to pay

 

After Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, Airbus has tried to find an alternative but has never found one. No one can supply titanium parts for an aircraft of this quality. If the recognized flagship of the aviation industry starts using parts of untested quality, it risks reputational risk: a crashed plane is enough to ruin Airbus' reputation and ruin contracts worth billions of euros.

 

Fighting Boeing and SpaceX: Why the West is begging Russia not to impose a ban on titanium exports

 

You can call out a moratorium on purchases, that's a political statement, and that's what's going on in the West right now. But the next step is to figure out a way to come back quietly (so as not to fall into the boss's eyes), having tested the ground before. For this, you need to wait.

 

Can they sit for a while (with a cumulative reserve of titanium parts. - Approximate lifespan)? yes. They clearly have some sort of inventory in their warehouses, especially given that demand for planes has dropped due to the pandemic. In fact, even Boeing reported in the first quarter of 2022 that it had produced 95 planes, less than half of what it had before the pandemic. So reserve

 

According to him, the reserves are clearly not enough to make the long wait. Sooner or later the question of whether to return to Russia or replace Russian titanium entirely will arise. The last one will take years. The workload is enormous, comparable to the Industrial Revolution.

 

pt 2

Anonymous ID: f3cdea Oct. 7, 2022, 8:08 p.m. No.17664701   🗄️.is 🔗kun

#22494

>>17663249

>>17664440

>>17663827

>>17663240

>>17662570

>>17664285

>>17664264

>>17663743

>>17664264

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>>17662486

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>>17664440

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>>17663925

>>17663689

>>17664391

>>17662838

>>17664437

>>17662499

>>17662361

 

Previously Collected

>>17664064

>>17662429

>>17664128

>>17664648

>>17663191

 

General Notable Pins: https://ghostbin.com/14ehq

TripCode feed: https://8kun.top/qresearch/tripcode.xml

Aggregators: https://qnotables.com | https://anontimes.com/

 

>>17664028