Anonymous ID: f49424 Feb. 13, 2023, 6:21 a.m. No.18338880   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8933 >>9093 >>9181 >>9275

PB

>>18338521 Ron DeSantis Black Pill

 

The list of Delta Kappa Epsilon brothers(commonly referred to as Dekes) includes initiated and honorary members of Delta Kappa Epsilon.

 

Delta Kappa Epsilon counts many political, business, sports, education, science, and arts leaders. Listed is a sample of some famous Dekes.

Presidents of the United States

 

19th President, Rutherford B. Hayes, Delta Chi

26th President, Theodore Roosevelt, Alpha

38th President, Gerald R. Ford, Omicron

41st President, George H. W. Bush, Phi

43rd President,George W. Bush, Phi

 

Note:

 

32nd President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Alpha

 

Franklin D. Roosevelt was a member of the Alpha Chapter of DKE at Harvard and would be considered the sixth DKE brother to serve as President of the United States; however, the Harvard chapter was de-recognized by DKE International due to the chapter's stance on dual membership with other fraternities.

 

Political figures

Dean G. Acheson, Phi – Secretary of State under Harry S. Truman, Architect of Cold War Foreign Policy

Larz Anderson, Alpha – U.S. Ambassador to Japan and Belgium

Robert Bacon, Alpha – US Secretary of State

Nathaniel Banks, Sigma – Speaker of the United States House of Representatives

Ron DeSantis, Phi – Governor of Florida (2019 - Present)

Albert J. Beveridge, Psi Phi – U.S. Senator, Indiana

Anonymous ID: f49424 Feb. 13, 2023, 6:35 a.m. No.18338933   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8940 >>8992 >>9071 >>9181 >>9239 >>9275 >>9370 >>9428

>>18338880

>The list of Delta Kappa Epsilon brothers

 

Agency heads

 

Rear Admiral Sidney W. Souers, Kappa – first director of the Central Intelligence Agency

Sargent Shriver, Phi – Founder and first director of the Peace Corps

 

This candidate for Florida governor cites serving at Guantánamo. What did he do there?By Emily L. Mahoney and Howard Altman Herald/Times Tallahassee Bureau Updated August 14, 2018 4:41 PM TALLAHASSEE Ron DeSantis was only about a year out of Harvard Law whenhe arrived at the U.S. detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. It was summer 2006— a tumultuous time. International scrutiny was building against President George W. Bush’s policies about “enemy combatants” who were dragged from other countries to the American facility in Cuba. Both the United Nations and the U.S. Supreme Court argued that the Pentagon’s methods for trying detainees violated their rights. In June, the military prison had its first reported deaths after three detainees reportedly killed themselves. And that fall, Pentagon officials would create the first post-9/11 interrogation standards that forbid waterboarding and other harsh tactics.

 

Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article216615190.html#storylink=cpy

 

The torture of Mohammed al-Qahtani is the only example of torture admitted to by a senior Pentagon official, when, just before President Bush left office, Susan Crawford, who oversaw the military commissions at Guantánamo, told Bob Woodward of the Washington Post, "We tortured Qahtani. His treatment met the legal definition of torture."

 

Al-Qahtani, however, was not the only prisoner tortured at Guantánamo. As Neil A. Lewis reported for the New York Times in a powerful article in January 2005:

 

Interviews with former intelligence officers and interrogators provided new details and confirmed earlier accounts of inmates being shackled for hours and left to soil themselves while exposed to blaring music or the insistent meowing of a cat-food commercial. In addition, some may have been forcibly given enemas as punishment.

 

While all the detainees were threatened with harsh tactics if they did not cooperate, about one in six were eventually subjected to those procedures, one former interrogator estimated. The interrogator said that when new interrogators arrived they were told they had great flexibility in extracting information from detainees because the Geneva Conventions did not apply at the base.

 

Although these specific techniques eventually came to an end,the Bush administration's official use of torture did not come to an end until June 2006, when, in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld, the Supreme Court reminded the Bush administration that common article 3 of the Geneva Conventions applied and applies to all prisoners held by U.S. forces. Just over two months later, 14 "high-value detainees" were moved from secret CIA prisons to Guantánamo, and President Bush announced that the "black sites" whose existence he had previously denied had been closed down.

 

https://www.closeguantanamo.org/Articles/119-Torture-Began-at-Guantanamo-with-Bushs-Presidential-Memo-12-Years-Ago

 

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article216615190.html

Anonymous ID: f49424 Feb. 13, 2023, 7:28 a.m. No.18339181   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9216 >>9238 >>9275 >>9295 >>9351

>>18338880

>>18338933

Desanctimonious

Wonder if this is what Potus is referring to.

Ron Ron frat bros with the Bush Crime family.

Proves his worth to muh Bushes by snuggling up to some of his teen students at the high school where he's teaching.

Gets JAG commission and gets sent to Gitmo during peak Bush torture program.

Gets sent to Iraq as "a seal advisor" to run bush cheney war crime coverup ops in Iraq.

Runs for office and never talks about his "stellar soldier career" and insteadlarps as Maverick in his Campaign ad

 

Ron DeSantis's Military Secrets: Torture & War Crimes

Empire Files

306K subscribers

75,533 views Nov 19, 2022

In this Eyes Left/Empire Files exclusive, Mike Prysner sheds light on the shadowy military career of Ron DeSantis. Featuring never-before-heard testimony by former Guantanamo detainee Mansoor Adayfi about DeSantis's participation in illegal torture at the prison camp, and why he was likely sent to Iraq to do war crime cover-ups next.