Anonymous ID: 1c07df July 11, 2023, 7:12 a.m. No.19160789   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19160778

>IF YOU DONT START GETTING THE FUCK OFF OF KUN AND FIGHTING BACK THE NORMIES WILL START BELIEVING THEM INSTEAD

 

Relax. It's part of the Show. Comical now right? They went from RUSSIA, RUSSIA, RUSSIA, to CHINA, CHINA, CHINA.

 

Kinda like it's PLANNED?

 

>IT HAS HAPPENED, IT WILL HAPPEN AND YOU NEED TO STAND THE FUCK UP AND STOP IT FROM HAPPENING

 

>YOU ARE THE FUCKING NEWS, SO FUCKING ACT LIKE IT

Anonymous ID: 1c07df July 11, 2023, 7:31 a.m. No.19160900   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19160791

>cluster bombs

Like Carpet Bombs?

Ukraine Swamp Carpet Bombs.

 

"Infastructure".

Energy

Gas

Oil

 

2014

 

In the span of a few weeks, an energy firm little-known inside the United States added two members to its board of directors — scoring connections to Secretary of State John Kerry and Vice President Joe Biden in the bargain.

 

On April 22, Cyprus-based Burisma announced that financier Devon Archer had joined its board. Archer, who shared a room in college with Kerry’s stepson, Christopher Heinz, served as national finance co-chair for the former senator’s 2004 presidential campaign.

 

Then, on Monday, the firm announced that Biden’s younger son, R. Hunter Biden, would join the board of directors.

 

Why would the company, which bills itself as Ukraine’s largest private gas producer, need such powerful friends in Washington?

 

The answer might be the company’s holdings in Ukraine. They include, according to the firm’s website, permits to explore in the Dnieper-Donets Basin in the country’s eastern regions, home to an armed pro-Russian separatist movement. They also include permits to explore in the Azov-Kuban Basin of the strategic Crimean peninsula, annexed earlier this year by Moscow.

 

It’s not clear what will happen to energy firms, like Burisma, that aim to explore and exploit potential deposits in those areas. Neither the Archer nor the Biden announcement explicitly mentions the unrest, and it’s not clear exactly when their discussions to join the board began. In an April 23 Q&A, the transcript of which appears on Burisma’s website, Archer said he had been approached “a few months ago” about the opportunity to consult for the oil company. The announcement of his directorship came less than a month after the disputed vote in Crimea to rejoin Russia.

 

The White House and the vice president’s office denied there was anything untoward about Biden’s appointment.

 

“Hunter Biden and other members of the Biden family are obviously private citizens and where they work does not reflect an endorsement by the administration or by the Vice President or President,” said President Barack Obama’s press secretary, Jay Carney. “But I would refer you to the Vice President’s office.”

 

“Hunter Biden is a private citizen and a lawyer,” the vice president’s press secretary, Kendra Barkoff, said in a statement. “The vice president does not endorse any particular company and has no involvement with this company. For any additional questions, I refer you to Hunter’s office.”

 

The person who answered the telephone at Biden’s office in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday cheerfully declared that Biden was traveling, that his return date was unknown, and that his assistant was also out of pocket.

 

An email to Burisma’s public relations department did not elicit a reply.

 

But Archer coyly acknowledged the potential benefits of having him on the board in the April 23 Q&A.

 

Question: “In the American media you are often linked to the immediate circle of the U.S. Secretary of State Mr. John Kerry and the Vice-president of the United States Mr. Joe Biden.”

 

Archer: “American journalists really think so(smiles). I do know them.”

 

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/news/why-did-a-energy-firm-prospecting-for-gas-in-ukraine-hire-joe-biden-s-son-195339212.html

Anonymous ID: 1c07df July 11, 2023, 8:11 a.m. No.19161049   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19161035

>James Mayer de Rothschild

James Mayer De Rothschild was a German-French Banker.

 

Rothschild was born Jacob "James" Rothschild the youngest son of Mayer Amschel Rothschild the founder of the Rothschild Banking Dynasty on May 15th, 1792. The Rothschild's are considered to be the richest family in human history. Mayer sought to expand his banking empire by sending his five sons to various countries throughout Europe. James ended up in Paris, France in 1811.

 

By 1817 de Rothschild would become an advisor to two kings of France. Following the Napoleonic wars he became the most powerful banker in France and played a major role in financing the construction of railroads and mining businesses turning France into an industrial power.

 

Although de Rothschild's personal finances have never truly be known, it was estimated that his personal wealth, not counting the rest of his family, exceeded that of Bill Gates and was quite likely more than 5 times that of Gates.

 

In 1822 de Rothschild and his four brothers were bestowed the hereditary title of "Freihen" (baron) by Emperor Francis I of Austria. de Rothschild was also appointed consul-general of the Austrian empire. In 1823 de Rothschild was awarded the French Legion of Honor.

 

In 1824 de Rothschild married his niece Bette Salmon Von Rothschild and had 5 children. King Louis XVIII refused to receive Bette at court because she was not a Christian, so de Rothschild refused to do business with the king any further.

 

de Rothschild used his wealth for philanthropic works and became a leader in the French Jewish community. His contributions as well as those of his descendants can be found in many fields including art and medicine.

 

de Rothschild passed away on November 15th, 1868.

 

de Rothschild was a member of Emulation Lodge No. 12 in London England. He was initiated in 1802.

 

https://www.masonrytoday.com/index.php?new_month=11&new_day=15&new_year=2020

Anonymous ID: 1c07df July 11, 2023, 8:57 a.m. No.19161253   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Heat Down Below Is Making the Ground Shift Under Chicago

 

CHICAGO — Underneath downtown Chicago’s soaring art deco towers, its multilevel roadways and its busy subway and rail lines, the land is sinking, and not only for the reasons you might expect.

 

Since the mid-20th century, the ground between the city surface and the bedrock has warmed by 5.6 degrees Fahrenheit on average, according to a new study out of Northwestern University. All that heat, which comes mostly from basements and other underground structures, has caused the layers of sand, clay and rock beneath some buildings to subside or swell by several millimeters over the decades, enough to worsen cracks and defects in walls and foundations.

 

“All around you, you have heat sources,” said the study’s author, Alessandro F. Rotta Loria, walking with a backpack through Millennium Station, a commuter rail terminal underneath the city’s Loop district. “These are things that people don’t see, so it’s like they don’t exist.”

 

It isn’t just Chicago. In big cities worldwide, humans’ burning of fossil fuels is raising the mercury at the surface. But heat is also pouring out of basements, parking garages, train tunnels, pipes, sewers and electrical cables and into the surrounding earth, a phenomenon that scientists have taken to calling “underground climate change.”

 

Rising underground temperatures lead to warmer subway tunnels, which can cause overheated tracks and steam-bath conditions for commuters. And, over time, they cause tiny shifts in the ground beneath buildings, which can induce structural strain, whose effects aren’t noticeable for a long time until suddenly they are.

 

“Today, you’re not seeing that problem,” said Asal Bidarmaghz, a senior lecturer in geotechnical engineering at the University of New South Wales in Australia. “But in the next 100 years, there is a problem. And if we just sit for the next 100 years and wait 100 years to solve it, then that would be a massive problem.”

 

Bidarmaghz has studied subterranean heat in London but wasn’t involved in the research in Chicago.

 

To assess underground climate change in Chicago, Rotta Loria, an assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Northwestern, has installed more than 150 temperature sensors above and below the surface of the Loop. He combined three years of readings from these sensors with a detailed computer model of the district’s basements, tunnels and other structures to simulate how the ground at different depths has warmed between 1951 and now, and how it will warm from now through 2051.

 

Near some heat sources, the ground beneath Chicagoans’ feet has warmed by 27 degrees Fahrenheit over the past seven decades, he found. This has caused the earthen layers to expand or contract by as much as half an inch under some buildings.

 

The warming and ground deformation are now happening more slowly than in the 20th century, he found, simply because the earth is closer to being just as warm as the basements and tunnels buried within it. More and more, those structures will stay warm rather than dissipating heat into the ground around them.

 

Rotta Loria’s findings were published Tuesday in the journal Communications Engineering.

 

The most effective way for building owners and tunnel operators to address the issue, he said, would be to improve insulation so less heat leaks into the earth. They could also put the heat to work. Rotta Loria is chief technology officer for Enerdrape, a startup in Switzerland making panels that absorb the ambient heat in tunnels and parking garages and use it to run electric heat pumps, cutting down on utility bills. The company has installed 200 of its panels in a supermarket parking garage near Lausanne as a pilot project.

 

Rotta Loria purposefully didn’t include one factor in his estimates of underground warming in Chicago: climate change at the city surface.

 

Hot weather warms the upper layers of soil. But Rotta Loria’s calculations assume that air temperatures in Chicago remain at their average recent levels all the way through 2051 — that is, his estimates don’t incorporate climate scientists’ projections for future global warming. Nor do they account for the fact that, as we continue warming the planet, large buildings will most likely use more air conditioning and pump even more waste heat into the ground.

 

The reason for these omissions, Rotta Loria said, is that he is trying to figure out a conservative lower bound on underground warming, not a worst-case scenario. “It already shows that there is a problem,” he said.

 

The office of Chicago’s mayor, Brandon Johnson, didn’t respond to requests for comment.

 

moar

https://www.yahoo.com/news/heat-down-below-making-ground-120642158.html