Anonymous ID: e62f17 July 16, 2023, 7:42 p.m. No.19193265   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3604 >>3612 >>3924

>>19193241

 

“Culture is — it is a reflection of our moment in our time, right? And in present culture is the way we express how we’re feeling about the moment,” Harris, 58, told audience members last Friday at the Essence Festival of Culture in the Caesars Superdome

 

“And we should always find times to express how we feel about the moment that is a reflection of joy, because as you know, it comes in the morning,” the vice president added, bursting into laughter.

 

“We have to find ways to also express the way we feel about the moment in terms of just having language and a connection to how people are experiencing life. And I think about it in that way too,” she said.

Anonymous ID: e62f17 July 16, 2023, 7:59 p.m. No.19193354   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19193268

perfect meme

 

"You are distressed that the Ukrainians don't have enough American tanks. Every city in the United States has become much worse over the past three years. Drive around. There's not one city that's gotten better in the United States, and it's visible," Carlson said.

 

"Our economy has degraded, the suicide rate has jumped, public filth and disorder and crime have exponentially increased, and yet, your concern is that the Ukrainians—a country most people can't find on a map—who've received tens of billions of U.S. tax dollars, don't have enough tanks. I think it's a fair question to ask, like, where's the concern for the United States in that?"

 

In reply, Pence said, "It's not my concern. Tucker, I've heard that routine from you before, but that's not my concern."This is where the video clip that was shared by Kirk on Twitter ends,

 

cutting off the rest of his answer. ALLEDGELY

 

 

 

https://youtube.com/shorts/_lD_biUbmaQ?feature=share

Anonymous ID: e62f17 July 16, 2023, 8:16 p.m. No.19193438   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19193324

It's unsettling it is. Anon read Alice in Wonderland as a kid and it was sheet, it wasn't an easy read and was largely nonsensical. Anon had no clue it anon wasn't the target audience.

Much like My Friend Mr Leakey, the espionage/RCA transistor theft spelled out in illustrations there. There's a page with the actual circuit board drawn into the art but anon can't find it. I've been looking for a first edition but they're SPENDY AF.

 

Mr. Leakey was indeed leaky. JBS Haldane the

 

Quinn Michaels did a crazy long stream about it with all of the pictures and a good explanation. I'm pretty sure he was correct and our British "allies" stole that shit before the patent was issued in the early 1950s.

With frens like that….

 

 

John Burdon Sanderson Haldane FRS (/ˈhɔːldeɪn/; 5 November 1892 – 1 December 1964[1][2]), nicknamed "Jack" or "JBS",[3] was a British-Indian scientist who worked in physiology, genetics, evolutionary biology, and mathematics. With innovative use of statistics in biology, he was one of the founders of neo-Darwinism.He served in the Great War, and obtained the rank of captain.[4] Despite his lack of an academic degree in the field,[1] he taught biology at the University of Cambridge, the Royal Institution, and University College London.[5] Renouncing his British citizenship, he became an Indian citizen in 1961 and worked at the Indian Statistical Institute for the rest of his life.

 

Haldane's article on abiogenesis in 1929 introduced the "primordial soup theory", which became the foundation for the concept of the chemical origin of life.[6] He established human gene maps for haemophilia and colour blindness on the X chromosome, and codified Haldane's rule on sterility in the heterogametic sex of hybrids in species.[7][8] He correctly proposed that sickle-cell disease confers some immunity to malaria. He was the first to suggest the central idea of in vitro fertilisation, as well as concepts such as hydrogen economy, cis and trans-acting regulation, coupling reaction, molecular repulsion, the darwin (as a unit of evolution), and organismal cloning.

 

In 1957, Haldane articulated Haldane's dilemma, a limit on the speed of beneficial evolution, an idea which is still debated today.[9] He willed his body for medical studies, as he wanted to remain useful even in death. He is also remembered for his work in human biology, having coined "clone", "cloning", and "ectogenesis". With his sister, Naomi Mitchison, Haldane was the first to demonstrate genetic linkage in mammals. Subsequent works established a unification of Mendelian genetics and Darwinian evolution by natural selection whilst laying the groundwork for modern synthesis, and helped to create population genetics.

 

Haldane was a professed socialist, Marxist, atheist, and secular humanistwhose political dissent led him to leave England in 1956 and live in India, becoming a naturalised Indian citizen in 1961.Arthur C. Clarke credited him as "perhaps the most brilliant science populariser of his generation".[10][11] Brazilian-British biologist and Nobel laureate Peter Medawar called Haldane "the cleverest man I ever knew".[12] According to Theodosius Dobzhansky, "Haldane was always recognized as a singular case"; Ernst Mayr described him as a "polymath";[13] Michael J. D. White described him as "the most erudite biologist of his generation, and perhaps of the century";[14] James Watson described him as "England's most clever and eccentric biologist"[15] and Sahotra Sarkar described him as "probably the most prescient biologist of this [20th] century."[16] According to a Cambridge student, "he seemed to be the last man who might know all there was to be known."[13]

 

Haldane wrote exactly 1 book (ONE) that wasn't non fiction and it was this spy book.