Anonymous ID: f46710 Sept. 1, 2024, 8:55 p.m. No.21520249   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21519742

Now make one that shows Kamel toe as the election burglar trying to steal the election. Or I guess anything along those lines. Kamel toe has a driver so….

Anonymous ID: f46710 Sept. 1, 2024, 9 p.m. No.21520273   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21519751

Used to use avg years ago, it slowed down my system, was always trying to sell or up sell something and generally became a nuisance. I sometimes wonder if the "anti-virus companies are the ones who keep making viruses in order to justify their jobs.

Anonymous ID: f46710 Sept. 1, 2024, 9:06 p.m. No.21520298   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>21519775

Boy, this guy sure called it. Pay attention how often people call us a democracy. I try to remind them we are a republic with SOME democratic elements. Usually falls on deaf ears.

Anonymous ID: f46710 Sept. 1, 2024, 9:32 p.m. No.21520368   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0514 >>0558 >>0562

>>21519870

Dissolving the Dead: A Look Inside Portland’s First Aqua Cremation Machine

 

May 9, 2019

 

In Oregon, there are five legal ways to lay the dead to rest. Bodies can be embalmed and shipped out of state; donated to scientific research facilities; cremated; buried; or dissolved. Yes, you read that correctly: When you die, the flesh can literally be dissolved from your bones.

 

The scientific name of the process is alkaline hydrolysis, though it’s more commonly known as aquamation or aqua cremation. If you want to avoid the mildly gory details later in this piece, here’s the short version: Like flame cremation, aqua cremation reduces the body to bones—it just uses water instead of fire. It’s legal in more than a dozen states, but Oregon was one of the first to legalize it in 2009, and it’s one of the only states with the proper facilities to actually perform the procedure.

 

https://www.portlandmercury.com/feature/2019/05/09/26448190/dissolving-the-dead-a-look-inside-portlands-first-aqua-cremation-machine

Anonymous ID: f46710 Sept. 1, 2024, 9:38 p.m. No.21520382   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0388 >>0514 >>0558 >>0562

How about a stroll down memory lane?

 

All the conspiracy theories about incoming House Democratic leadership

 

Select excerpts.

 

For most of 2018, Schiff has been linked to something conspiracy theorists refer to as the “Standard Hotel Incident,” referring to a hip hotel in West Hollywood, a part of town Schiff represents.

 

The Standard has supposedly been the site of a number of mysterious deaths, orgies, fights, and occult incidents in the last few years—which were subsequently covered up by murdering three executives at the Standard via a helicopter crash.

 

o be sure, while conspiracy theorists agree that the “Standard Hotel Incident” definitely happened and that Schiff was definitely involved, what exactly the incident was and what Schiff actually did have proven to be more elusive to a crowd that has no problem making up tenuous connections.

 

In fact, nobody has actually linked Schiff to anything that happened at the Hotel, and there haven’t been any arrests regarding any unusual activity at the hotel in the time that Schiff has represented that district (due to redistricting, Schiff has only represented West Hollywood since 2013.)

 

The crash itself certainly did happen, as the helicopter that three executives were flying in went down shortly after taking off, appearing to lose power and slam into a house in a gated community in Newport Beach. But what this has to do with Schiff isn’t clear, other than the place where the passengers worked happening to be in Schiff’s district.

 

Beyond that, it seems like conspiracy theorists are content to rhetorically pester Schiff on Twitter, rather than delve into what actually might have happened. This is the certainty that conspiracy theories offer—you know something bad happened and that someone you don’t like was involved—even if you don’t know what it was, when it took place, or what actually happened.

 

Twitter was the source of another completely unsourced and unevidenced rumor about Schiff, that he paid out an undisclosed sexual harassment settlement brought by a 19-year-old male intern in 2013. The attribution for this story was merely “congressional sources,” yet numerous QAnon accounts got tens of thousands of retweets spreading it around.

 

Read the whole thing here. My how time flies.

 

https://www.dailydot.com/debug/adam-schiff-house-democrats-conspiracy-theories/