holy shit, try your old twitter account, I just did and I'm back…
yea, but i can't post….snooze, not that I even want it back.
No I don't, and can't post anyway, and zero followers / following.
I'm a blocker, not the thing to be for them types anyway.
Needs the death penalty for pedos as well.
YOUR post can be subject to legal matters, due to content you bring attention to, ergo,
give all details of the info,
Date and time if available,
Address of info,
Headliner or pic of post.
Details matter, thanks.
This is the anons news, put in all details you can.
I always purposely change lyrics to suit situations, but good to know the true ones too.
sar-chasm
Kick is so bad, it promotes drugs, gambling, and tons of bad behavior.
Kek, and the announcer doxes the guy's street, what a tool.
DOD FACT SHEET: DoD Employee Subscription for McAfee Antivirus for Home Use
Tons of gov. software.
https://storefront.disa.mil/kinetic/disa/service-catalog#/forms/antivirus-home-use
https://www.arcyber.army.mil/Resources/Fact-Sheets/Article/2123310/dod-fact-sheet-dod-employee-subscription-for-mcafee-antivirus-for-home-use/
'Zactly…
What they don't say, is the blood is drugged, that hasn't come out yet.
Take a look on my friend's site, there's everything.
Fighting Monarch
A Resistance Site For Survivors of CIA, NSA, Tavistock, and Illuminati Mind Control
https://fightingmonarch.com/
happy hunting.
ya know he does…
Here’s Why Washington D.C. Isn’t a State
3 minute read
By Tessa Berenson RogersApril 15, 2016 1:57 PM EDT
With Washington, D.C.’s mayor calling for a November vote on statehood, it raises the question, why wasn’t the nation’s capital made a state in the first place?
First, it’s worth remembering that Washington, D.C. was not always the capital. George Washington first took office in New York City, and then the capital was moved to Philadelphia, where it remained for a decade. Washington, D.C. was founded as the capital in 1790 as a result of a compromise between Alexander Hamilton and northern states, and Thomas Jefferson and southern states. Hamilton’s economic policies consolidated power in the bankers and financiers who primarily lived in the North, so the compromise moved the capital physically more South, to appease Jefferson and southern leaders who feared northern control of the nation.
But the lack of statehood for the capital is enshrined in the Constitution. Article 1, Section 8, Clause 17 of the document reads, “The Congress shall have Power To …exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the Acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States.”
James Madison outlined the reasoning behind this provision in Federalist 43, calling the arrangement an “indispensable necessity.” He wrote, “The indispensable necessity of complete authority at the seat of government, carries its own evidence with it… Without it, not only the public authority might be insulted and its proceedings interrupted with impunity; but a dependence of the members of the general government on the State comprehending the seat of the government, for protection in the exercise of their duty, might bring on the national councils an imputation of awe or influence, equally dishonorable to the government and dissatisfactory to the other members of the Confederacy.”
In other words, the founders worried that if the capital were to be a state, the members of the government would be unduly beholden to it. Madison envisioned that voting members of a D.C. state would be able to ‘insult’ or ‘interrupt’ the proceedings of government to get their way, simply by virtue of physical proximity to the halls of power.
When the capital was officially moved to D.C., residents lost voting representation in Congress and the Electoral College, as well as a say in Constitutional Amendments and the right to home rule. Members of the district won a victory in 1961 with the passage of the 23rd amendment to the Constitution, which granted them votes in the electoral college.
To this day, D.C. does not have voting representation in Congress, and the federal government maintains jurisdiction over the city. For proponents of D.C. statehood like Mayor Muriel Bowser, there is still a long way to go.
https://time.com/4296175/washington-dc-statehood-history/
My point in writing that was if the mayor is using the term, 'state' anything after that is null and void.
It'll take a few arrests before they all fall in line. Gotta whack a mole or two, to let them know the seriousness of it.
Kek, anyone can go edit a wiki.
I'm sure with the E.O. concerning freedom of speech, a clause will be added about intentionally lying about facts on such sites.
5 years ago too many were still brainwashed. Awaking people takes time, now is the beginning of turning it all around.
I think anything that was used against the people, should be abolished, and a new venue created for the people.
We are ridding the world of 'they'.
mil time 15:27
tv is clown ran. Most reality shows will have a person on it, who'll say, my father was CIA, or FBI, on each different show. They tell you, if you listen.
>>22416524
I lived the worst of the worst, but war stories aren't a game.
The FCC, Federal Communications Commission never did it's job, time for a change.
That's like two people sitting on a couch and one says, can you get me a drink?
Yes I can, but I won't, kek!
Whether John is alive or dead, it's definitely comms to make someone nervous.
theme, head shots, and a longer image for biden, that's funny.
manic episodes can cause paranoia.
Rockwell - Somebody's Watching Me (Lyrics)
When someone is in a paranoid delusion, they like a two year old, believe 'everyone' knows the ins and outs of that person, including mind reading.
so they know I like cannolis from NY?
Paranoia usually includes lack of sleep, and in a mania, the less sleep, the more hyper the brain is, to create many more scenarios of paranoia. Until proper sleep and reducing the stressors causing the mania, the hyper mind will continue.