Anonymous ID: b0d7ac Oct. 31, 2023, 6:05 p.m. No.19839571   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19839529

 

I believe it. My WWII Dad got nothing in Hamilton county, not even a visit before he died. Cleve clinic at least shot him up with radioative seeds which did nothing for his enlarged prostate. But cancer spread thru his bones from the seeds.

 

>$31 million meant for veterans spent on other projects in Hamilton County, Ohio

 

>Oct 30, 2023

 

>Nearby Butler County spent $1,880,182 in 2022 to run their entire operation and Clermont County spent $2,076,790. Hamilton County, who serves three times the number of veterans, spent just $930,691. Hamilton County — who again has the highest number of veterans in the region — has a total of six people in its Veterans Service Office.

 

>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5q9QCooggA

Anonymous ID: b0d7ac Oct. 31, 2023, 6:17 p.m. No.19839654   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19839586

>>19839641

Lack of genetic variation

These politically advantageous matches often involved marriages between relatives – some married distant cousins, others their first cousin or niece. Many of these close consanguineous matches needed papal dispensation: although the genetic issues of close marriages were not understood, they were still perceived as unnatural in some respect.

 

Unsurprisingly, perhaps, centuries of this kind of close intermarriage led to a lack of genetic variation. Normally, a child is the product of two very different gene pools, but if your parents are cousins, chances are they share the same recessive genes.