Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 3:27 a.m. No.20473948   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4497 >>4580

https://twitter.com/WallStreetApes/status/1761550260835660132

 

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WOW 🚨 A Lettuce Vaccine Bill Being Introduced

 

Health Committee, Tennessee Rep Scott Cepicky “University of California Riverside has already perfected the ability to put human vaccines into our lettuce right now. Also tomatoes has the ability to do that also for UC Berkeley. — Big Tobacco, RJ Reynolds and stuff has perfected the ability to put a human vaccine in the tobacco products.”

 

**I will note that USA Today Fact Checkers have rushed to put out articles saying: “Fact check: Genetically engineering your salad with the COVID-19 vaccines? We're not there yet.”

 

Continues Testimony from the Health Committee:

 

“And is that even legal to do in the state of Tennessee to sell those with a vaccine in them?“

 

“I'm not arguing that point. What I'm saying is there is no law deeming those that when you go into a grocery store, you should know as a consumer, this head of lettuce is a head of lettuce. The head of lettuce right next week could contain a vaccine in it. All we're saying is if it does have the vaccine in it, make sure it's listed as a pharmaceutical so people can get the proper dosage.

You're organized. Thank you.

 

Well, my question is right now, can you walk into a grocery store and there'd be a let head of lettuce for sale that has a vaccine in it?

 

I don't think that's allowed under state law presently. And if it is and you have to list it as a Pharmaceutical. Pharmaceutical, are we going to then have Walgreens pharmacists with a refrigerated section? I mean, how's this gonna play out? You're asking us thank you.

 

This is more of a consumer protection bill right here. It's to make sure that if you're going in to buy tomatoes and there's a polio vaccine in there, that you are aware of what you're buying has a polio vaccine, the problem you have is if it's not treated as a pharmaceutical, being the size and difference between you and me, how many tomatoes do I have to eat to get the proper dosage versus how many tomatoes that you have to eat? And if you eat too many, do you get a a overdose? If you eat too less, like we had in the cattle industry with Eromycin, we weren't dosing our cattle properly, and the horn flies were developing an immunity to it.

 

If we don't have the proper dosage of a vaccine, it could lead to the efficacy of that drug not work anymore.”

 

I have also included footage at the end of this Health Committee Testimony of Tennessee Rep Scott Cepicky being confronted and questioned about this Lettuce Vaccine Bill.

6:34 PM · Feb 24, 2024

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Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 3:38 a.m. No.20473986   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3990 >>4497 >>4580

https://twitter.com/akihheikkinen/status/1761090493713191266

 

Aki Heikkinen

@akihheikkinen

Several police officers taken to hospital with respiratory symptoms after gas alarm at Swedish Security Police Säpo's headquarters. Building evacuated.

 

Media sources say that sensors at the roof detected cobat gas phosgene Personnel also smelled an odour

From tv4.se

12:07 PM · Feb 23, 2024

 

 

Torgny Forss

@TorgnyForss

Phosgene gas according to local media! Cc

@HamishDBG

 

@DanKaszeta

From bbc.co.uk

12:15 PM · Feb 23, 2024

 

https://twitter.com/TorgnyForss/status/1761092375701594593

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 3:41 a.m. No.20473997   🗄️.is đź”—kun

https://www.wfmz.com/news/area/pennsylvania/pittsburgh-police-to-stop-responding-to-certain-emergency-calls/article_8c8f4040-d354-11ee-bcab-8bb0f8c5e6e1.html

 

Pittsburgh Police to stop responding to certain emergency calls

 

PITTSBURGH — Starting Monday, the city of Pittsburgh says it will no longer respond to 911 calls that are not related to "in progress emergencies."

 

According to a press release titled "Pittsburgh Bureau of Police Makes Operational Changes to Better Serve Pittsburgh," the city will create a "Telephone Reporting Unit" (TRU) to dispatch calls that do not require an in-person response by officers.

 

"TRU will NOT be assigned to any 'In Progress' call where a suspect may be on scene, any crime where a person may need medical aid, any domestic dispute, calls with evidence, or where the Mobile Crime Unit will be requested to process a scene," the press release said.

 

Local Trending News

According to an investigation by the Pittsburgh-based station WPXI, this means that calls related to crimes such as criminal mischief, theft, harassment and burglary alarms will all be handled by the TRU or other forms of online reporting.

 

According to WPXI, Pittsburgh Police Chief Larry Scirotto says it's part of an effort to cut down his department's call volume from 200,000 to 50,000 calls per year.

 

The changes come as the Pittsburgh Bureau of Police personnel prepare to transition from working five eight-hour days to four 10-hour days each week. The schedule change is also effective Monday and designed to enhance officer wellness, according to Scirotto.

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 3:42 a.m. No.20474000   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4012 >>4027 >>4077 >>4497 >>4580

Te Whatu Ora data breach has vaccinators fearing for their safety(New Zealand)

 

A nurse says she will be looking over her shoulder for years after her name was published online in an unauthorised leak of Te Whatu Ora data.

 

At least 12,000 people, most of them vaccinators, had personal information released online after the breach, and the woman is one of those who were notified by Te Whatu Ora that her name was published on a US website.

 

The nurse, who did not want her name used, said she was shocked to receive an email from Te Whatu Ora on Friday telling her her name was on the list.

 

She was not sure what else to do to feel safer, and so far had asked her landlord to fix her fence.

 

“I just worry that someone will come to my house and threaten me and my children,” she said.

 

The email to the vaccinators said their names were found on a document on the US site on January 25.

 

“To the best of our knowledge, your name was removed from the publicly available file on 29 January,” it said. “In saying this, I also need to acknowledge that the information is still held by one or more parties outside of our control.”

 

An email to vaccinators said their names were found on a document on a US site in January. Photo / Warren Buckland

An email to vaccinators said their names were found on a document on a US site in January. Photo / Warren Buckland

The nurse worried people might track her down years later and wanted Te Whatu Ora to guarantee it would support any nurses with safety help long-term.

 

She felt let down by the breach. The importance of privacy was drilled into her and her colleagues in training and she had expected the same from Te Whatu Ora, she said.

 

“I assumed that their standard of confidentiality and privacy would be top-tier, pretty much everything sealed so nothing like this could happen,” she said. “I’m quite frustrated they haven’t upheld their side of keeping us, as nurses, safe in New Zealand during a pandemic.”

 

Union the Nurses Society represented about 6000 nurses, and its director David Willis said they had heard from a lot of worried people. They were also concerned that they could be approached.

 

Wills said he had not spoken to anyone who had been threatened or harassed, but the union had emailed advice to all its members on what to do if they were.

 

“Of course, people are mindful that [the data] is still in the hands of people outside their control and that is concerning and disturbing and hopefully Te Whatu Ora has taken steps to make sure that doesn’t happen again.”

 

In a statement, Te Whatu Ora chief of people Andrew Slater said any unauthorised release of data was a gross breach of trust and they were very disappointed.

 

Barry Young. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Barry Young. Photo / Mark Mitchell

The agency understood staff and the public trusted them with sensitive data, and it was working to improve internal controls and strengthen data security, he said.

 

He apologised to all those impacted.

 

The agency had set up a helpline the vaccinators can call, and its letter suggested other services to go to as well if people wanted advice.

 

Former Te Whatu Ora employee Barry Young was due in court on Friday, accused of accessing a computer for dishonest purposes in relation to the leaked Te Whatu Ora data.

 

  • RNZ

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 4:07 a.m. No.20474077   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4082

>>20474000

>>20474012

https://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message5654213/pg1

some responses:

 

"it's called karma folks.

I hope she gets harassed to death.

they knew what they were doing and this just proves it."

 

"The idea of payback really fuels my days, the thought of revenge is so fucking sweet i enjoy the dark thoughts it gives me. Soon.'

 

"Fuck these people.

The residents of NZ should have them all tried for accomplice to genocide.

Post their names and pictures in every village so the people know who maimed and killed their loved ones.

Billboards of Gates …"

 

"Someone should mass produce decks of cards with all of the names of the clot shot pushers. Same format as the most wanted Iraqi deck of cards. At least one deck for each language and jurisdiction."

 

"If you're in healthcare and you're concerned for your safety were your name to be associated with something you're doing in the medical profession, then maybe, y'know, that's a hint you shouldn't be doing it?

 

You would hope that as a doctor or nurse you'd be proud of the stuff you've done and would be thrilled to have your name associated with your good works. Saving lives and preserving health and so on. If you feel a need to not be associated with what you did then there's a very good chance you did something bad.'

 

"If the vaccines are safe and effective they have nothing to worry about right?

 

And why do they care about their anonymity having vaccinated people? Public Nurses and Doctors don't conceal their identities."

 

"She shouldn't have participated in the murders.

I hope someone manages to get to her and pay her back.

Leave her children alone, though."

 

"These modern "healthcare" workers are a completely different breed. They are only interested in ONE thing.

Job security.

Even NOT murdering you is too much to ask from these fucking GHOULS."

 

"How many deaths and injustices happen just because someone wants to keep a job?

 

Eternity is a long time and it will not be placid.'

 

"If anyone deliberately knowingly injects a harmful substance into another person they are legally responsable."

 

"Anyone who chose to participate is guilty."

 

"YEP, they knew. Death, no. But I hope the harrassment gives her a taste of what it was like for her patients that she did not stand up for and protect. I feel bad for her kids. I feel no empanthy or sympathy for whatever the fallout is for her. Thorny bed she will now have to lie in…I kinda hope it is extra prickly"

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 4:13 a.m. No.20474112   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4144

>>20474102

newfag?

 

#1092861 at 2018-04-18 21:18:48 (UTC+1)

Q Research General #1364: Forgot to name the bread Edition

 

>>1092798

The original starbucks logo had a twin-tailed mermaid, known as Melusine. According to Wikipedia the tale of Melusine is as follows:

 

The tale was translated into German in 1456 by ThĂĽring von Ringoltingen, the version of which became popular as a chapbook. It was later translated into English c. 1500, and often printed in both the 15th century and the 16th century. A prose version is entitled the Chronique de la princesse (Chronicle of the Princess).

 

It tells how in the time of the Crusades, Elynas, the King of Albany (an old name for Scotland or Alba), went hunting one day and came across a beautiful lady in the forest. She was Pressyne, mother of Melusine. He persuaded her to marry him but she agreed, only on the promise - for there is often a hard and fatal condition attached to any pairing of fay and mortal - that he must not enter her chamber when she birthed or bathed her children. She gave birth to triplets. When he violated this taboo, Pressyne left the kingdom, together with her three daughters, and traveled to the lost Isle of Avalon.

 

The three girls - Melusine, Melior, and Palatyne - grew up in Avalon. On their fifteenth birthday, Melusine, the eldest, asked why they had been taken to Avalon. Upon hearing of their father's broken promise, Melusine sought revenge. She and her sisters captured Elynas and locked him, with his riches, in a mountain. Pressyne became enraged when she learned what the girls had done, and punished them for their disrespect to their father. Melusine was condemned to take the form of a serpent from the waist down every Saturday. In other stories, she takes on the form of a mermaid.

 

Raymond of Poitou came across Melusine in a forest of Coulombiers in Poitou in France, and proposed marriage. Just as her mother had done, she laid a condition: that he must never enter her chamber on a Saturday. He broke the promise and saw her in the form of a part-woman, part-serpent, but she forgave him. When, during a disagreement, he called her a "serpent" in front of his court, she assumed the form of a dragon, provided him with two magic rings, and flew off, never to return.[1]

 

Beyond the tale of Melusine and the mythological mystery of the mermaid, the other gods of the sea are amongst the most powerful in history, as water represents the power of creation which can both give, and destroy life.

 

For example, the Christian iconography of the fish symbol is associated with Jesus - and although it is believed to be in relation to his statement to "Peter and Andrew that if they followed him, He would make them fishers of men" - this mythology, too, dates back even before the Bible, and is actually relating to the Dagon god (or "fish god") of the Philisitines.

 

http:// www.collective-evolution.com/2018/03/23/the-real-hidden-meaning-behind-the-starbucks-logo-why-would-they-pick-two-tailed-mermaid/

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 4:17 a.m. No.20474122   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4124 >>4178

Georgia AG claims not having a phone makes you a criminal

 

https://georgiarecorder.com/2024/02/12/georgia-ag-claims-not-having-a-phone-makes-you-a-criminal/

 

A police officer watches as protester holds a Stop Cop City sign against the door in Atlanta City Hall. Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder

 

The ubiquity of smartphones is causing some to pine for simpler times, when we didn’t have the entire history of humankind’s knowledge at our fingertips on devices that tracked our every move. There’s a growing trend, particularly among young people, to use non-smartphones, or “basic phones.” The reasons range from aesthetic to financial to concern for mental health. But according to Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, having a basic phone, or a phone with no data on it, or no phone at all in the year 2024, is evidence of criminal intent. The AG’s position poses grave dangers for all Georgians’ constitutional rights.

 

Last month, Deputy Attorney General John Fowler argued in state court that mere possession of a basic cellphone indicates criminal intent to commit conspiracy under Georgia’s racketeer influenced and corrupt organizations statute, better known as RICO.

 

His accusation was directed at 19-year-old Ayla King, one of 61 people indicted last summer on RICO charges linked to protests in the South River Forest where the $109 million Atlanta Public Safety Training Center, nicknamed “Cop City” by its opponents, is slated to be built. The RICO charges against King and the 60 other RICO defendants have been widely criticized as a political prosecution running contrary to the First Amendment. King is the first of these defendants to stand trial.

 

During the Jan. 8 hearing in Fulton County Superior Court, Fowler argued that a cellphone in King’s possession on the day of their arrest, which he characterized as a “burner phone,” should be admissible as evidence of wrongdoing, even though it contained no data. He went even further to suggest that not possessing a cellphone at all also indicates criminal intent. Judge Kimberly Adams agreed to admit evidence of King’s cellphone.

 

Civil liberty groups are decrying the AG’s argument and court’s action as violations of constitutional rights under the First Amendment and Fourth Amendment. In an open letter to Attorney General Carr, the groups wrote, “It is alarming that prosecutors sworn to uphold the Constitution would even make such arguments—let alone that a sitting judge would seriously entertain them, and allow a phone to be searched and potentially admitted into evidence without any indication that it was used for illegal purposes.”

 

The Supreme Court recognized in the 2014 case Riley v. California that cellphones carry enough personal information—photos, text messages, calendar entries, internet history, and more—to reconstruct a person’s life using smartphone data alone. “Prior to the digital age, people did not typically carry a cache of sensitive personal information with them as they went about their day,” the Court noted. “Now it is the person who is not carrying a cellphone, with all that it contains, who is the exception.”

 

On the dark side of smartphones’ interconnectivity is their susceptibility to surveillance. In 2022, it was reported that the U.S. Department of Justice had purchased for testing a version of the Phantom spyware from NSO Group, an Israeli firm which sold its surveillance technology to governments like Mexico and Saudi Arabia to spy on journalists and political dissidents. Phantom could be used to hack into the encrypted data of any smartphone located anywhere in the world, without the hacker ever touching the phone and without the phone’s user ever knowing. The U.S. federal government denied using Phantom in any criminal investigation, but concerns about surveillance in the U.S. have led some folks to obtain basic phones.

 

Flip phones have made a comeback, and the potential for invasion of privacy is one of the reasons why. I’m not talking about the recent wave of smartphones that flip open. I’m talking about early 2000s-era basic phones, whose smartest feature was the game Snake or, if you were lucky, the ability to set your favorite song as your ringtone.

 

Folks are returning to basic phones—or in the case of Gen Z, turning for the first time—out of recognition that doom scrolling on a smartphone for hours each day is not good for mental health. For some older adults, basic phones, which offer few features beyond calling and texting, are preferable to smartphones for their simplicity. There are lots of reasons why someone might have a basic phone—not to mention they’re cheaper and more durable than a lot of smartphones.

p1

Anonymous ID: c8df3d Feb. 25, 2024, 4:17 a.m. No.20474124   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4176

>>20474122

 

Using simple phones that have little data on them is a legitimate, and common, practice for journalists, whistleblowers, human rights activists, and other people seeking to protect their identities or those of others from surveillance by the government or malicious actors. The Committee to Protect Journalists recommends that journalists cycle through “low-cost burner phones every few months” to maintain their safety and that of their sources. Even athletes competing in the 2022 Beijing Olympics were advised to use burner phones in light of the overreaching state surveillance in China.

 

Using a burner phone is not evidence of criminal intent—it’s a reasonable response to the threat of surveillance and government overreach. While burner phones are not immune from location tracking via cell towers, the fact that they contain much less data than a smartphone can make them a more secure form of communication.

 

How deeply invasive of privacy rights will the AG’s logic extend? Will the prosecution argue that using a virtual private network (VPN) is evidence of criminal intent? What about communicating via encrypted messaging apps, like Signal? The First Amendment protects the right to anonymous speech, and the use of privacy protection measures like VPNs and Signal has become commonplace in today’s world. The AG has already asserted in the RICO indictment that anonymous speech communicated online constitutes a conspiracy, but if the AG argues that using VPNs and Signal is evidence of criminal intent, he would be going even further by claiming that the very tools which make people feel safe to communicate online are themselves evidence of criminal intent, thereby assuming criminality before the speech has even taken place.

 

The position the AG has taken in Ayla King’s case has the potential to make all of us suspects. If you have a smartphone with data on it, the information on the phone can be used as evidence against you. And if you have a phone with no data on it or no phone at all, that can be used as evidence against you.

 

The state’s use of the absence of evidence as affirmative evidence is an unsettling development, and one that seems desperate. Is it—and perhaps the RICO charges themselves—a sign of prosecutorial weakness in a case intended to silence criticism and criminalize First Amendment expression?

 

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