well!
anons best guess is that we are saving PINDAR for last!!!
muahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahkek!!!
well!
anons best guess is that we are saving PINDAR for last!!!
muahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahkek!!!
keep drinking the q drops and one day you will grow up to be a patriot!
It's great to be back at Q Shaped Gardens in the great state of Kekistan!
Anon's next piece is called "Nothing".
Enjoy!
Nov 12, 2020 9:32:39 PM EST 4950
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 53ce5e No. 11617856
GodBlessAmerica.png
NOTHING can stop what is coming.
NOTHING!
Q
Oct 31, 2020 6:44:04 PM EDT 4944
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: a19e8d No. 11379902
Are you ready to finish what we started?
'NOTHING can stop what is coming' is not just a catch-phrase.
Q
Oct 15, 2020 2:11:46 PM EDT 4874
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 07ac09 No. 11086408
Would you like to send anything else on over during the House Intel Committee hearing?
NOTHING can stop this.
Q
Oct 09, 2020 7:03:33 PM EDT 4845
Q !!Hs1Jq13jV6 ID: 67e0eb No. 11004505
https://twitter.com/HillaryClinton/status/573340998287413248
Roger that, Madam Secretary.
[C] = classified [State]
https://www.businessinsider.com/hillary-clinton-fbi-report-classified-markings-2016-9
Clinton Foundation [+Soros, journalist(s) dir, Africa, SA, SAPs, China, Russia, U1, Hussein dir, Benghazi, MB, CIA assets, crimes against humanity, ……] [route _Huma cc Weiner backup]?
NOTHING is ever truly deleted.
Threats, blackmail, and bribes.
Q
Q !!mG7VJxZNCI 11/06/2018 16:16:21 ID:8chan/patriotsfight: 422 2442
History is being made.
You are the saviors of mankind.
Nothing will stop what is coming.
Nothing.
Q
POTUS is our savior. Q #111
US Military = savior of mankind. Q #114
You are the saviors of mankind. Q #2442
Inside the AP’s investigation into the ethics practices of the Supreme Court justicesJuly 11, 2023
WASHINGTON (AP) — An Associated Press examination of the ethics practices of the U.S. Supreme Court relied on documents obtained from more than 100 public records requests to public colleges, universities and other institutions that have hosted the justices over the past decade.
Here’s a look at how the reporting was done:
To conduct its review, the AP surveyed local news stories and social media and obtained data from ScotusTracker, a website that logged justices’ activities, to develop a list of appearances over the past 10 years.
In late 2022 and early this year, the AP submitted records requests to the public institutions on that list, citing individual state statutes that require the disclosure of certain documents to the public.
The requests sought a broad range of information, including details about any contracts or riders for the appearances; transportation to and from events as well as food and lodging; the recording policy for the event; and any gifts or honorarium discussed or offered, including books.
The AP separately queried more than 100 private colleges, universities and charities that have also hosted justices or organized events for them, requesting that they provide the same information that was asked of public institutions. Some confirmed basic details of the visits, but few provided substantive information.
The AP cataloged the travel and perks afforded to the justices. The AP also compiled lists of guests, including donors and politicians, who were invited to private receptions with justices and vetted them wherever possible against information in federal court records, Federal Election Commission filings, online photo albums of events and other publicly available data.
The responses among public institutions varied widely. Some schools, including the University of Rhode Island, Ohio State University, Stony Brook University and the University of California, Davis, provided records free of charge. Some schools turned over thousands of pages of records, including George Mason University and the University of Kentucky.
McLennan Community College in Waco, Texas, produced 104 pages of records in March and then, following a $110 payment, shipped by mail a box of blue folders containing hundreds more pages. A reporting trip was also taken there so that a journalist could observe firsthand the site of a dinner that the college organized for Justice Clarence Thomas.
In some instances, AP filed multiple requests with the same institution, either because the school asked that the initial request be substantially narrowed or because an initial response suggested that even more details might be available. In the case of the University of Texas at Tyler, for instance, the AP filed a follow-up request to obtain a guest list for a dinner with Thomas. A follow-up request was filed with the University of Mississippi for the cost of a flight that carried Justice Elena Kagan, Justice Antonin Scalia and Scalia’s son and grandson in 2014.
An email from July 10, 2018, with the syllabus about Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch teaching an upcoming law class in Italy is photographed, July 10, 2023. An Associated Press examination of the ethics practices of the U.S. Supreme Court relied on documents obtained from more than 100 public records requests to public colleges, universities and other institutions that have hosted the justices over the past decade. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)
An email from July 10, 2018, with the syllabus about Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch teaching an upcoming law class in Italy is photographed, July 10, 2023. An Associated Press examination of the ethics practices of the U.S. Supreme Court relied on documents obtained from more than 100 public records requests to public colleges, universities and other institutions that have hosted the justices over the past decade. (AP Photo/Jon Elswick)
Some institutions were less forthcoming. The AP went to the Illinois state attorney general to get a binding opinion directing the Chicago Public Library to produce documents related to a visit by Justice Sonia Sotomayor. Other schools, including the University of Arizona, have said their search for records remained ongoing after more than six months.
The AP did pay some schools for documents, including $350 to the University of Utah; $140 to Michigan State University; $159.24 to the University of Minnesota; and roughly $150 to the University of Mississippi.
But some schools responded to records requests with fee demands that the AP deemed unreasonable. The initial fee cited by the University of Georgia for processing two requests was $18,800.50, though it was later reduced after the AP narrowed its request.
https://apnews.com/article/supreme-court-ethics-documents-conflicts-9fa2847e60e11601c872c3ba3eea12a3