> there is a portal to an extensive underground cavern
There's a mine up on Cripple Creek.
https://westernmininghistory.com/towns/colorado/nevadaville/
> there is a portal to an extensive underground cavern
There's a mine up on Cripple Creek.
https://westernmininghistory.com/towns/colorado/nevadaville/
>with Nazi flag.
There are five flags in the photo @Truthbait. There are two circled objects.
There are no Nazi flags.
>Do they teach the US Constitution in the US Military recruit or officer training or anything?
Every American service member takes an oath to โsupport and defend the Constitution of the United States.โ The oath is not to the country, the government, or the flag. It is to the Constitution.
But precious few service members truly know what that oath means because the military makes no effort to teach it. I speak from experience: I served in the Marine Corps for nine years, after which I attended law school, where it took only a few weeks before I had learned infinitely more about the Constitution than I learned during my nine years defending it. https://www.militarytimes.com/opinion/commentary/2021/02/10/why-the-military-should-educate-its-members-about-the-constitution/#
As a veteran, I was mortified by the large number of U.S. military veterans involved in the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. The Joint Chiefs of Staff reacted by reminding service members to abide by their oaths of office โ and yet one of the many things the insurrection revealed is that some troops might not understand their sworn duty to โsupport and defend the Constitution of the United States.โ
This realization invalidates the longstanding assumption that servicemembers have acquired an understanding of the U.S. Constitution in their high school civics classes, and as one veteran argued recently, suggests that the military needs to fill this crucial educational gap. How might it go about doing so?
https://www.defenseone.com/ideas/2021/02/how-teach-troops-about-constitution/172117/
https://www.quora.com/Are-U-S-military-personnel-required-to-learn-the-U-S-Constitution-in-detail
Enlisted: NO!
Officers entering AFTER college graduation OR later in Life: NO
Officers that enter through a Military-ish school that has a ROTC: depends on school, branch, ROTC program, etc.
>she does make a nice cup of tea"
>Nazi flag.
Flag. https://www.adl.org/resources/hate-symbol/nazi-party-flag
Check.
> no arrests
Unusual to have a 1-year gap from arrest to trial?
What might be the purpose?
Q
>You can get out when you coff up all the names you're hiding.
If the war was like the last big one she'd be shot already. She does not warrant enemy combatant status. She has a spy's fate.
>military to arrest the fucking child rapists.
What of the traffickers? The sellers? The buyers? The networks? The institutions that created the market? The politicians, intelligence agencies, and others who support the trade in children? The solution seems simple to you because you grossly underestimate the nature of the problem, Anon.
>if she gives up 200 high placed names that could be confirmed.
If you mean her 'clients' - a better term might be 'targets', the evidence she held against them is sufficient to identify who the targets are. Her family is pretty good with software and organization. Her family contacts are even better at it. If you mean who she worked for the NSA already has all her collectable communications. You can cover a lot with a FISA umbrella.
Hi. Who do you work for?