Anonymous ID: 2c5f70 Jan. 29, 2024, 11:30 a.m. No.20325025   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5231 >>5403 >>5469

>>20324924

tx anon, great article.

 

>Eight Ways Chris Wray and Bill Barr Destroyed Free and Fair Elections in America

 

ENTIRE ARTICLE.

 

  1. GBI Strategies Democrat-funded ballot registration harvesting scandal

  2. The #DetroitLeaks training sessions

  3. In a coordinated act, battleground states quit counting ballots on election night

  4. The FBI and DOJ hid the Biden family crimes from the American public despite holding onto Hunter Biden’s “Laptop from Hell” since 2019.

  5. The FBI and DOJ refused to investigate the Ballot Box stuffing operations by Democrats

  6. The United States Postal Service (USPS) was transporting trailers full of completed ballots from New York to swing state Pennsylvania

  7. The State Farm Center ballot stuffing operation

 

THERE IS NO NUMBER 8!

but this is the "last line" of the article:

 

''Bill Barr played a major role in the scheme to remove President Trump by any means nece''

 

ends mid-sentence - so it's a posting error.

Anonymous ID: 2c5f70 Jan. 29, 2024, 11:43 a.m. No.20325083   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5088 >>5129

>>20325068

>https://7news.com.au/news/influencers-paid-to-discourage-sun-tanning-in-australia-after-shocking-attitudes-emerge-c-13394221

 

wanted to find out what the shocking attitudes actually are….

 

EXCERPT:

 

Millions of dollars will be put towards a new campaign to reframe Australia’s dangerous obsession with sun tanning.

 

The Cancer Council linked high rates of the cancers, in part, to beauty standards causing young Australians to feel uncomfortable in their own skin, which is why the government has recruited digital content creators to help shift priorities online.

 

It comes as new research confirmed most young Australians believe their chances of getting skin cancer are slim.

 

While skin cancer affects two out of three Australians, almost one in three (31 per cent) young Australians think it’s fine to suntan at their age, according to new research cited by the Department of Health.

 

While most Australians would be familiar with the five forms of sun protection — slip, slop, slap, seek, and slide — less than one in 10 young Australians are consistently adhering to the advice.

 

“One person dies from the disease every six hours,” the Department of Health said while introducing the End the Trend campaign on Monday.

 

Cancer Council Australia CEO Professor Tanya Buchanan said the research confirms a dangerous obsession.

 

“The research shows young Australians have pro-suntanning attitudes and are not being safe in the sun,” she said.

 

“We know they perceive a suntan as desirable and prioritise this. The truth is, until every young Australian feels confident in their natural skin, skin cancer will sadly remain our most common cancer.”

 

While cancer should be off-putting enough, the strategy pivots to take aim at an image-conscious demographic. “Sun exposure accounts for 80 per cent of visible ageing,” the website reads.

 

Paid partnership posts already beginning to appear on social media include video content like styling tips incorporating giant sunhats, sleeves and sunglasses.

 

“We had to consider new ways to reach this group. So we’ve gone to where they are — online, at music festivals and through fashion and lifestyle media,” Health Minister Mark Butler said.

 

“We’re partnering with people they’ll listen to so we can help normalise sun protection.”…..