Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 5:42 a.m. No.22105707   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5709 >>5712

A hateful man disguises himself with his speech, but he lays up deceit in his heart.

When he speaks graciously, do not believe him, for seven abominations fill his heart.

Though his hatred is concealed by deception, his wickedness will be exposed in the assembly.

He who digs a pit will fall into it, and he who rolls a stone will have it roll back on him.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 5:50 a.m. No.22105749   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22105747

“Domino’s Emergency Pizza campaign was the perfect fit for ‘Squid Game’ because if anyone understands an emergency, it’s the players in the game itself," Magno Herran, vice president of partner and brand marketing at Netflix, said in a statement. "We took the most iconic games from the series and reimagined what would happen if the players had Emergency Pizza to save them. The custom spots will also run on Netflix's ad-supported plan, so our members can see them as they watch the show.”

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 6:01 a.m. No.22105806   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5818 >>5855 >>5898 >>6056 >>6260

>>22105794

>CEO of UnitedHealthcare fatally shot outside of Hilton hotel in Midtown

https://nypost.com/2024/12/04/us-news/ceo-of-unitedhealthcare-fatally-shot-outside-of-hilton-hotel-in-nyc-in-possible-targeted-attack-sources/

UnitedHealthcare CEO fatally shot outside of Hilton hotel in Midtown in possible targeted attack

The CEO of UnitedHealth was fatally shot in the chest Wednesday morning outside the Hilton hotel in Midtown in what police say was a targeted attack.

Brian Thompson, 50, was at the hotel at around 6:46 a.m. when a masked man fired at the CEO and fled eastbound on 6th Avenue, police sources told The Post.

Thomas was rushed to the hospital in critical condition, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UnitedHealth_Group

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 6:23 a.m. No.22105905   🗄️.is 🔗kun

There is absolutely no question in my mind that the Mormon ceremony which came to be known as the Endowment, introduced by Joseph Smith to Mormon Masons initially, just a little over one month after he became a Mason, had an immediate inspiration from Masonry. This is not to suggest that no other source of inspiration could have been involved, but the similarities between the two ceremonies are so apparent and overwhelming that some dependent relationship cannot be denied.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 7:32 a.m. No.22106251   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6271 >>6289

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/us/news/2024/12/03/mexico-rules-out-trump-proposal-us-military-drug-cartels/

US ‘invasion’ of Mexico to take out cartels rejected by Sheinbaum

Trump administration’s suggestion that special forces could be set on drug gangs dismissed as like something out of a ‘movie’

Mexico has said it will not accept an “invasion” by US forces amid talks by Donald Trump’s transition team to deploy American troops to fight drug cartels.

Claudia Sheinbaum, Mexico’s president, said: “Of course we do not agree with an invasion or the presence of this type in our country. During the government of president López Obrador there was greater control by US agencies in Mexico, and that will be maintained.”

It comes amid mounting reports that Washington could dispatch Special Forces soldiers to eliminate Mexican drug cartels.

Tom Homan, the man tapped by Mr Trump to lead his border closures, recently told Fox News the president-elect “will use [the] full might of the United States Special Operations to take ‘em out”.

An anonymous source told Rolling Stone last week that transition officials had discussed “how much to invade” Mexico.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 7:36 a.m. No.22106276   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/01/world/americas/mexico-fentanyl-chemistry-students.html

Mexican Cartels Lure Chemistry Students to Make Fentanyl

Criminals turn college campuses into recruitment hubs, recruiting chemistry students in Mexico with big paydays.

The cartel recruiter slipped onto campus disguised as a janitor and then zeroed in on his target: a sophomore chemistry student.

The recruiter explained that the cartel was staffing up for a project, and that he’d heard good things about the young man.

“‘You’re good at what you do,’” the student recalled the recruiter saying. “‘You decide if you’re interested.’”

In their quest to build fentanyl empires, Mexican criminal groups are turning to an unusual talent pool: not hit men or corrupt police officers, but chemistry students studying at Mexican universities.

People who make fentanyl in cartel labs, who are called cooks, told The New York Times that they needed workers with advanced knowledge of chemistry to help make the drug stronger and “get more people hooked,” as one cook put it.

The cartels also have a more ambitious goal: to synthesize the chemical compounds, known as precursors, that are essential to making fentanyl, freeing them from having to import those raw materials from China.

If they succeed, U.S. officials say, it would represent a terrifying new phase in the fentanyl crisis, in which Mexican cartels have more control than ever over one of the deadliest drugs in recent history.

“It would make us the kings of Mexico,” said one chemistry student who has been cooking fentanyl for six months.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 7:48 a.m. No.22106338   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22106081

>What the government employees and social media companies were calling "mis-information, dis-information, and mal-information" was, in fact, the truth!

whoa nobody saw that one coming

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 7:59 a.m. No.22106394   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6400

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/12/03/syria-diversity-friendly-jihadists-plan-building-state/

How Syria’s ‘diversity-friendly’ jihadists plan on building a state

Hayat Tahrir al-Sham’s leader has issued statements aimed at allying fears among the population aligned with the Assad regime

In the chaos of Syria’s war, it was a moment of bureaucratic ceremony.

Three men in camouflage combat fatigues met a handful of suited civilians within the captured city of Aleppo. At the meeting on Monday, fighters of Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) formally passed over responsibility for the city to the jihadist group’s proto-government.

With the administration of Bashar al-Assad ousted from Aleppo, HTS now has responsibility for a city of two million people.

The symbolic ceremony, published on HTS’s social media channels, was meant to assure the public that the group was ready to govern as well as fight.

In Western capitals, there is clear – and understandable – ambivalence about the jihadist group that has captured swathes of north-west Syria over the past week.

Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, the HTS leader, has a $10 million US bounty on his head. He joined both al-Qaeda and the Islamic State (IS), before splitting from both groups and rejecting their “extreme” tactics.

Human rights groups have documented torture of political opponents in the region of Idlib, which HTS has controlled since the battle lines against the Assad regime froze during the Covid pandemic in 2020.

On Monday, the US, Britain, Germany, France and the UK released a non-committal statement calling on “all sides” to “de-escalate”.

While the brutality of the Assad regime’s war on the opposition saw Syria’s president become a pariah in the West, some officials cite the maxim that the “enemy of my enemy can still be my enemy”.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 8:19 a.m. No.22106531   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22106518

Dad: De la Rocha was also influential in establishing the traditional Mexican celebration of the Day of the Dead in Los Angeles, when he, along with Chicano artist Gronk and a few others, led a procession from Evergreen Cemetery up First Street in Eastside Los Angeles. Luján later said that de la Rocha "should be given credit for initiating this process—almost single-handedly.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evergreen_Cemetery_(Los_Angeles)

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 8:28 a.m. No.22106573   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14156999/Daniel-Penny-prosecutor-Dafna-Yoran-hypocrisy-revealed.html

Daniel Penny prosecutor Dafna Yoran's breathtaking 'hypocrisy' revealed as she demands manslaughter conviction

The prosecutor trying Daniel Penny is a hardline progressive who once bragged about getting a mugger who killed an 87 year-old off a murder charge.

Assistant Manhattan DA Dafna Yoran has asked jurors to convict the marine veteran of manslaughter over the subway chokehold death of Jordan Neely, despite previously pushing for 'restorative justice' for criminals.

In 2019, she asked for reduced punishment for Matthew Lee, 57, after he snuck up on former Lehman College professor Dr. Young Kun Kim, 87, and killed him over $300 with a fatal blow to the head.

The horrific incident was caught on video.

Yoran saw an opportunity in Lee's case to use the 'restorative justice' program introduced by former Manhattan DA Cyrus Vance Jr, as reported by Gothamist.

Lee was charged with manslaughter instead of felony murder after he agreed to meet with the victim's family and both parties consented to the outcome. This reduced his potential sentence from 25 years to life to 10 years. He will be eligible for parole in 2026.

'I had a murder case where the defendant did not intentionally kill the victim,' Yoran boasted during an online seminar.

'When I got the time I took the time to learn about he defendant…. I really felt incredibly sorry for him that he had gotten to that point in his life where he felt there was no choice but to commit this robbery.'

But Yoran has taken a decidedly more hardline approach to 26-year-old Penny's case. She is asking for a potential sentence of 15 years - even though Penny too has always claimed he did not mean to kill Neely, but was acting after the homeless man made threats to other train passengers.

While she discussed Lee as a man who was desperate after falling on hard times, she has maintained a confrontational attitude towards Penny during his trial, with witnesses she has brought to the stand referring to him as 'the white man' and 'murderer.'

'He didn't recognize that Jordan Neely was a person,' Yoran told the jury of Penny. 'He saw him as a person that needed to be eliminated.'

Jurors are deliberating on the fate of Penny in a case that has sparked a national debate.

The anonymous jury is weighing manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide charges in the death of 30-year-old Neely, a troubled street performer who was homeless. The veteran has maintained that his actions were justified.

Anonymous ID: 748a01 Dec. 4, 2024, 8:28 a.m. No.22106575   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22106573

Penny has said he was protecting fellow subway riders and intended only to restrain Neely and hold him for police, not to hurt him. Prosecutors say the Marine veteran used far too much force for too long when he gripped Neely by the neck for about six minutes.

The case has animated debate about public safety, societal responses to mental illness and homelessness, the line between self-defense and aggression, and the role of race in all of it.

In a reflection of the complexities of the closely watched case, the jury asked within the first 75 minutes of deliberations to rehear Judge Maxwell Wiley’s instructions on justification defenses and on the definitions of the crimes charged.

After the re-reading and 90 more minutes of deliberations, jurors headed home for the day Tuesday without reaching a verdict.

Witnesses said Neely boarded a train under Manhattan on May 1, 2023, started moving erratically, yelling about his hunger and thirst and proclaiming that he was ready to die, to go to jail or — as Penny and some other passengers recalled — to kill.

Penny came up behind Neely, grabbed his neck and head and took him to the floor. The veteran later told police he’d held Neely in 'a choke' and 'put him out' to ensure he wouldn’t hurt anyone.

City medical examiners ruled that Neely was killed by having his neck compressed in a chokehold. A pathologist hired by Penny’s defense contradicted that finding, attributing the death to a variety of other factors.

Penny’s lawyers argued that he used what they term a 'civilian restraint,' departing from the chokehold technique he’d been taught in the military, in order to control Neely without rendering him unconscious. Prosecutors say Neely had the training to know that what he was doing could kill.

Wiley told jurors Tuesday that if they convict Penny of manslaughter, they won’t be asked for a verdict on the lesser charge of criminally negligent homicide. If they decide he’s not guilty of manslaughter, they’ll consider the second charge.

Manslaughter requires proving that a defendant recklessly caused another person’s death. The standard entails, among other things, consciously disregarding a substantial and unjustifiable risk that an action will be deadly.

Criminally negligent homicide, on the other hand, involves engaging in serious 'blameworthy conduct' while not perceiving such a risk.

Both charges are felonies. Neither carries mandatory prison time, but both carry the possibility of it — up to 15 years for manslaughter, or four for criminally negligent homicide.

Deliberations will resume Wednesday.