is Q just conspiracy?
799
20-Feb-2018 10:58:12 PM PST
8ch/qresearch
>>448410
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DEEP DREAM= TWITTER
Big post.
@Jack thought he was protected.
No sleep since drop.
Tasked [3] to remove followers in drip order and restrict.
Coincidence?
HOT in DC.
No sleep.
Stay tuned.
Q
DC_Draino
@DC_Draino
2 Congressional buildings had their power and internet cut today during hearings
Then Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and other major social media platforms went down worldwide
Is this a cyberattack from China or Russia?!
3:00 PM · Feb 8, 2023
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https://mobile.twitter.com/DC_Draino/status/1623456747057983490?cxt=HHwWhMDRyevT1octAAAA
Saudis increase US citizen’s tweet sentence to 19 years in ‘middle finger’ to Biden
By Steven Nelson
February 8, 2023 11:04am Updated
WASHINGTON — A Saudi appeals court has increased the prison sentence of a US citizen for critical tweets from 16 years to 19 years in a “middle finger” to President Biden, the jailed man’s son tells The Post.
The State Department told Ibrahim Almadi about the revised Saudi penalty Wednesday — months after the White House publicly condemned his father, Saad Almadi’s, treatment.
“It’s not a slap in the face, it’s a middle finger,” Ibrahim told The Post, noting that his septuagenarian father has “lost more than 80 pounds” since his arrest in November 2021 on charges linked to more than a dozen tweets mildly critical of the Saudi government.
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“When the US asked for an appeal, they said, ‘Here you go, 19 years!’” his son exclaimed.
Saad Almadi, a 72-year-old retired engineer, has lived in the U.S. since the 1970s and is a naturalized American citizen. He was arrested while returning to his homeland to sell family property.
Since being jailed, Almadi has been kept in inhumane conditions without a bed or chair — sometimes housed alongside dangerous suspected terrorists, his son said.
Almadi’s case has come up repeatedly at White House briefings, though Biden has not personally commented on it.
“The Saudi government understands the priority we attach to resolving this matter. Exercising the freedom of expression should never be criminalized,” White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Oct. 19.
A week later, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said: “We respect and understand and sympathize with the anguish [of Almadi’s family]. We continue to work on these cases all around the world, as much as we can.”
But the State Department has refused to officially designate Almadi as “wrongfully detained” — a bureaucratic term used to increase pressure on world leaders.
https://nypost.com/2023/02/08/saudis-increase-saad-almadi-sentence-to-19-years-over-political-tweets/
Jeb is a Latin American expert