Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 6:32 a.m. No.19908657   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8666 >>8671

It had to be this way…

Masochist logic.

 

Los Angeles home owner gets into frightening front door shootout with would-be intruders

 

A Los Angeles homeowner was ambushed by two armed suspects who were allegedly trying to break into his home, the man told Fox News Digital.

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 6:35 a.m. No.19908665   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8693 >>8708 >>8724 >>8780 >>8802 >>8861

>>19908650

Stop it

 

Melania Trump Disliked Husband’s Events Due To ‘Creepy’ People In Attendance

 

An ex-staffer of former First Lady Melania Trump has revealed that she was uncomfortable attending events related to her husband, former President Donald Trump, due to the behavior of some attendees.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/melania-trump-disliked-husband-events-191556638.html

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 6:54 a.m. No.19908722   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8744 >>8929 >>9283 >>9401 >>9489

No one WILL EVER TRUST the CDC

So, they stick a "Jewish" person in there, so NO ONE CAN CALL OUT THE DS cause any Criticism of the Establishment as a whole, corrupt, SWAMP will be dismissed as "Anti-Semetic.

 

That is the Current state of "Israel" Games.

Put stupid people in there, of Jewish Descent, and then play VICTIM when EVIL is called out.

 

How CDC's new director is trying to regain trust shattered by covid

 

ATLANTA - The new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had spent days on television and social media urging Americans to get the updated coronavirus vaccine. The new shot is the most effective protection for the looming virus season, she said. And it's free.

 

But by the afternoon of Sept. 21, it was becoming clear to Mandy Cohen that the nine-day-old vaccine rollout was stumbling, with many Americans unable to promptly get shots at pharmacies, insurers making erroneous claims about who would have to pay, and little explanation from the government.

 

Cohen ducked into a small basement conference room at the embattled agency's headquarters for an update. Across the table, Nirav Shah, the CDC's principal deputy director, laid out several insurance and supply chain issues. The federal government was no longer overseeing the manufacturing and distribution of vaccines now that the covid public health emergency has ended, so the CDC had much less control over the rollout, he explained.

 

Cohen frowned. She wanted to publicly address the delays right away. "If we don't say something, it makes it seem like we're not paying attention," she told Shah. "I don't want to say 'supply chain.' I want to say real words."

 

The next day, Cohen recorded a short video acknowledging the problems. "It's important to know that there is vaccine available. You will be able to get one and it should be free for you. Whether or not you have insurance," she said in the message, posted on Twitter. "If you've had a problem finding the vaccine, stick with it."

 

The exchange illustrates Cohen's approach to leading the once-vaunted public health agency as it tries to recapture public trust battered by its missteps during the coronavirus pandemic. While the rollout for the updated vaccine has improved in recent weeks, uptake remains slow, and some Americans are still having difficulty finding shots - dimming a moment Cohen and her colleagues had hoped would showcase her ability to rebuild confidence in the agency.

 

The Washington Post attended public and private meetings over three days with Cohen in Atlanta and Washington, D.C., in September and spoke with three dozen agency officials, Biden administration leaders and public health experts to discuss her early tenure. The snapshot that emerged captures someone who acts quickly and decisively, sometimes at odds with long-standing CDC tradition and engendering frustration among staffers who say her expediency has at times led to confusion and redundant work.

 

Shortly after arriving as an outsider to lead the agency, she sent senior officials a "Mandy Cohen User Guide," a two-page document of bullet points detailing "the most productive user experience using me."

 

Cohen, a physician and the former North Carolina health secretary, does not like surprises or "meandering meetings," the guide warns. She wants to be kept in the loop with "frequent, SHORT updates by email." Otherwise, the guide says, "I (often wrongly) assume nothing is happening."

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/cdcs-director-trying-regain-trust-200344490.html

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 7:01 a.m. No.19908751   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8759 >>8769

>>19908737

Has nothing to do with being respectful

It's Idolizing her, and using her image as Prop.

She's a brilliant woman, being reduced to appearance and lust.

But, you probably don't see it that way, cause idols…

She finds it CREEPY.

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 7:10 a.m. No.19908773   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8787 >>8788 >>8796 >>8985

>>19908759

Ok, so your ego is justifying now.

Yes, you're using her as a prop in a meme, that has nothing to do with Q research.

Is this a research board?

Yes

Is this a Beauty Pageant board?

No.

 

Ever talk to a beautiful woman, and ask if they like being constantly oogled and cat called? Reduced to appearance only?

 

The sauce was posted. You got uppity and cognitive dissonance blinded you.

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 7:23 a.m. No.19908829   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8847 >>8885

>>19908787

You sound TRIGGERED

Then, you go to SHILL level and insult me.

 

This is the post that the CREEPY comment reminded me of.

You think they like being oogled. Good for you.

That is, in itself, disrespectful.

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 7:28 a.m. No.19908850   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Trump ‘demanded a straight-up quid pro quo’ from Kim Kardashian, later broke with her over Biden: Book

 

He welcomed her into the Oval Office in 2018, but former President Trump reportedly had a much different response after the 2020 presidential election when Kim Kardashian called asking him for a criminal justice-related favor: “Hell no.”

 

The episode, which included Trump hanging up on the reality TV star, is recounted in Jonathan Karl’s forthcoming book “Tired of Winning.”

 

Kardashian made headlines in 2018 when she met with Trump in the Oval Office to discuss prison reform and sentencing. Days after the meeting, Trump granted clemency to Alice Johnson, who was serving a life sentence on nonviolent drug and money laundering charges.

 

“I have nothing bad to say about the president,” Kardashian said later that year. “He has done something amazing.”

 

Kardashian later would urge Trump to grant more commutations, according to the ABC News journalist’s book, as first reported Monday by Axios’s Mike Allen.

 

“A source familiar with the conversations tells me Trump listened to her requests and demanded a straight-up quid pro quo,” Karl said in his book.

 

“[Trump] would grant the commutations, he told Kardashian, if she leveraged her celebrity connections to get football stars who were friends of hers to come visit him at the White House.”

 

The 43-year-old SKIMS founder “actually tried to do what Trump demanded,” according to Karl, “seeing it as a small price to pay to get justice for people she believed were serving unjust sentences. But all the players she approached declined. Trump had become too toxic.”

 

After Trump exited the White House in 2021, Kardashian reached out to the ex-commander in chief about snagging his support for other clemency efforts.

 

“Hell no, the former president told her. He wouldn’t do it,” Karl wrote.

 

“’You voted for Biden and now you come asking me for a favor?’ Trump told her,” the book said.

 

“After a few more choice words, the line went dead. Trump had hung up on her.”

 

While Karl noted that Kardashian never publicly endorsed a 2020 White House hopeful, she posted heart emojis on a photo of then-President-elect Biden and Kamala Harris on social media in the days after the November election.

 

In 2021, Kardashian said she was a mixture of both political parties.

 

“I believe in the rights that the Democrats want, but I believe in the taxes that the Republicans want,” she said at the time.

 

A spokesperson for Trump ripped Karl’s book, telling Axios,“This filth either belongs in the discount bargain bin in the fiction section of the bookstore or should be repurposed as toilet paper.”

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-demanded-straight-quid-pro-142749017.html

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 8:09 a.m. No.19909043   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9048 >>9053 >>9057 >>9109 >>9283 >>9401 >>9489

Joe's triggered…

 

HuffPost

Joe Scarborough Warns Trump Is 'Going Full-On Hitler' After Weekend Rhetoric

 

MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough said Donald Trump is “going full-on Hitler” after the former president referred to political opponents as “vermin” over the weekend.

 

The “Morning Joe” host took it as a warning ahead of the 2024 election.

 

“You look at the language of Donald Trump, you look at what Donald Trump says he’s going to do, and you go back to Maya Angelou saying that ‘when somebody tells you who they are, believe ‘em the first time,’” Scarborough said on his morning show Monday, quoting the late civil rights activist.

 

“We have to believe him, and we also have to believe that this is the most important election probably since 1864,” he added. That election, during the Civil War, saw Abraham Lincoln elected to a second term.

 

In a Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump vowed to “root out the Communists, Marxists, Fascists, and Radical Left Thugs that live like vermin within the confines of our Country, lie, steal, and cheat on Elections, and will do anything possible, whether legally or illegally, to destroy America, and the American Dream.”

 

“The threat from outside forces is far less sinister, dangerous, and grave, than the threat from within,” the leading contender for the Republican 2024 nomination added.

 

He made similar remarks during a Veterans Day rally in Claremont, New Hampshire.

 

As commentators in the media have noted, Trump’s rhetoric is reminiscent of Nazi propaganda, which referred to Jewish people as “vermin.”

 

Last month, Trump drew rebuke after he said undocumented immigrants are “poisoning the blood of our country,” another phrase that echoes language used by Nazi dictator Adolf Hitler.

 

keks at Joe Blow

https://www.yahoo.com/news/joe-scarborough-warns-trump-going-153753221.html

Anonymous ID: 5f9def Nov. 13, 2023, 8:50 a.m. No.19909284   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9401 >>9489

Behind Public Assurances, Xi Jinping Spreads Grim Views on U.S.

 

When President Xi Jinping of China made his first state visit to the United States in 2015, he wrapped his demands for respect in reassurances.

 

He courted tech executives, while defending China’s internet controls. He denied that China was militarizing the disputed South China Sea, while asserting its maritime claims there. He spoke hopefully of a “new model” for great power relations, in which Beijing and Washington would coexist peacefully as equals.

 

But back in China, in meetings with the military, Xi was warning in strikingly stark terms that intensifying competition between a rising China and a long-dominant United States was all but unavoidable, and that the People’s Liberation Army should be prepared for a potential conflict.

 

In Xi’s telling, China sought to rise peacefully, but Western powers would not accept the idea that a Communist-led China was catching up and could someday overtake them in global primacy. The West would never stop trying to derail China’s ascent and topple its Communist Party, he said in speeches to the military that are largely unreported by the media.

 

“Beyond doubt, our country’s growing strength is the most important factor driving a profound readjustment of the international order,” he told top commanders in November 2015, two months after his visit to the United States. “Some Western countries absolutely never want to see a socialist China grow strong under the leadership of the Chinese Communist Party.”

 

Despite his assurances to President Barack Obama not to militarize the South China Sea, Xi told his senior commanders in February 2016 that China must bolster its presence there, saying: “We’ve seized the opportunity, eliminated intervention and sped up construction on South China Sea islands and shoals, achieving a historic breakthrough in maritime strategy and defending maritime rights.” (In the years that followed, China quickly expanded its military infrastructure in the area.)

 

Xi’s remarks are among collections of speeches that Xi made to the People’s Liberation Army and Communist Party officials, published by the military for internal study by senior officers, and seen and corroborated by The New York Times. The volumes, “Xi Jinping’s Selected Major Statements on National Defense and Military Development,” cover his initial years in power, from 2012 to February 2016.

 

The speeches offer a new, unvarnished view into the leader at the center of a superpower rivalry that is shaping the 21st century. They show how at times he has voiced an almost fatalistic conviction — even before Beijing’s ties with Washington took a steep dive later in the Trump administration — that China’s rise would prompt a backlash from Western rivals seeking to maintain their dominance.

 

“The faster we develop, the bigger the external shock will be, and the greater the strategic blowback,” Xi told Chinese air force officers in 2014.

 

In Xi’s worldview, the West has sought to subvert the Chinese Communist Party’s power at home and contain the country’s influence abroad. The Communist Party had to respond to these threats with iron-fisted rule and an ever-stronger People’s Liberation Army.

 

As Xi prepares to meet with President Joe Biden in California this week, the question of how the two powers will manage their rivalry hangs over the relationship.

 

Xi has been trying to stabilize relations with Washington, apparently pressed by China’s economic troubles and a desire to reduce Beijing’s diplomatic isolation. “We have a thousand reasons to grow the relationship between China and the United States, and none at all to ruin it,” Xi told American lawmakers in Beijing recently.

 

But with mutual distrust running deep, any easing of antagonism between the two sides could be tenuous.

 

Xi underscored that his judgment of the challenge posed by the United States remains unchanged, saying with rare public bluntness in March: “Western countries led by the United States have implemented all-around containment, encirclement and suppression of China.”

 

moar

https://www.yahoo.com/news/behind-public-assurances-xi-jinping-130327081.html