Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 8:51 a.m. No.22914937   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4944

>>22914914

THATS A ODD DIAGNOSIS?

Sounds like there is something to do with what they eat and their immune system.

where did he get those figures from, is this a new study or is it from the same quacks who fiddle the figures.

Meaning of Pre-diabetes

Prediabetes is a condition where your blood glucose levels are higher than normal but not high enough to be diagnosed as diabetes.

This stage indicates that your body is becoming resistant to insulin or is not producing enough insulin to maintain healthy blood sugar levels.

Without intervention, you are at high risk of developing type 2 diabetes.

However, adopting a healthier lifestyle can reduce your risk of progressing to type 2 diabetes and even reverse prediabetes.

Prediabetes often does not have clear symptoms, so many people may not know they have it.

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 9:19 a.m. No.22915056   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5081 >>5103 >>5124

ANONS NEED TO REPORT FROM OTHER PARTS OF EUROPE AND OUTSIDE THE USA IF THIS IS HABBENING IN THEIR NATIONS

Note: Anon believes this is the wef in partnership with china to shut down free speech and use propaganda against the usa during the china tariff wars.

vote for who ever you want, but if you want the parasitic class out of the u.k, reform uk is the only way, if not, it is clear division.

GAB CANCELLED IN THE UK - Repeal the 'Online Safety Act' and restore free speech now

https://youtu.be/1yiIZvTae8Q

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 9:25 a.m. No.22915081   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5103 >>5106

>>22915056

CARL BENJAMIN READS THE LATEST ECONOMIST ARTICLE

Note: video below, will find the article to post also, the economist is the globalist mouthpiece.

=

Europe Is Not the Land of the Free

https://youtu.be/LKFFrOJnGCQ

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 9:31 a.m. No.22915103   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5106

>>22915056

>>22915081

SATIRE AS PROPAGANDA

Note: no author mentioned. just Charlemagne,

===

The thing about Europe: it’s the actual land of the free now

Europe’s very real problems don’t look so bad by comparison

https://archive.ph/jSADL

https://www.economist.com/europe/2025/04/10/the-thing-about-europe-its-the-actual-land-of-the-free-now

Apr 10th 2025

Listen to this story

The thing about Europe, the sneerers say, is that it is over-regulated. Mounds of red tape and punitive taxes mean there are no trillion-dollar entrepreneurial ventures in France or Germany to match Amazon, Google or Tesla. But that is not all Europe is lacking. Also absent from the continent are the broligarchs who sit atop such behemoths, some of whom have a tighter grip on power than on reality. There are thus no European Rasputins pumping untold millions into political campaigns, getting pride of place at leaders’ inaugurations or their own new-minted government departments to run. There are few unicorns in Europe, alas, and too little innovation. That said, there are absolutely no tech executives boasting on social media of spending their weekends feeding bits of the state “into the wood chipper”.

The thing about Europe is that it is indecisive, too slow to act. Every crisis requires multiple summits of the European Union’s national leaders, often quibbling late into the night. The boring processes of rule by consensus can slow the EU to a crawl: it took four days and four nights of haggling to agree on the bloc’s latest seven-year budget, in 2020. Then again, the European state apparatus does not arbitrarily shut down every few years when political agreement over funding proves elusive, leaving millions of public employees on furlough and basic services unavailable for days or weeks. Consensus rule also means that the petulant policy tweets of one misguided politician—125% tariffs on China, anyone?—do not result in global stockmarkets being sent into a tailspin. The EU’s top brass are unelected and sometimes unaccountable. Still, they would not dare be photographed playing a round of golf after having wiped out the savings of millions of their compatriots.

The thing about Europe is it freeloads on defence, not spending enough on its armed forces to single-handedly fend off threats. This will continue to be true for a long time, even as defence budgets are hiked across most of the continent. But it also reflects a different understanding of what “defence” means. For one, nobody in Europe—outside Russia, at least—is even casually implying they will invade other countries. There is no Brussels quip about turning an unwilling neighbour into “our 28th state” (on the contrary, many of the EU’s neighbours are desperate to join the club). Nor do European vice-presidents fly uninvited to places they are seeking to annex, on the pretext that their spouse wants to watch a sledge race. Europe may have scrimped on intelligence-gathering, but its various leaders do know the identity of the aggressor who initiated the fighting in Ukraine (hint: it is not Ukraine). Many foresaw the pitfalls of invading Iraq a while back.

The thing about Europe is that it lacks an absolutist attachment to free speech. See how judges in Romania and France derailed the careers of hard-right politicians, who have convinced themselves (with little evidence) that it was their ideology rather than their lawbreaking that got them in trouble. Yet to many Europeans the idea that free expression is under threat seems odd. Europeans can say almost anything they want, both in theory and in practice. Europe’s universities never became hotbeds of speech-policing by one breed of culture warrior or the other. You can express a controversial view on any European campus (outside Hungary, at least) without fear of losing your tenure or your grant. No detention centres await foreign students who hold the wrong views on Gaza; news outfits are not sued for interviewing opposition politicians.

continued

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 9:33 a.m. No.22915106   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5155

>>22915103

>>22915081

Law firms are not compelled to kow-tow to presidents as penance for having worked for their political foes.

The thing about Europe is that it is facing a demographic crisis. It is staving off a sharp decline in population only by shoring up its workforce with immigrants, some of whom have integrated poorly. Such immigration shows the appeal of the European way of life; for those who come seeking refuge from war, it shows Europeans’ generosity (sometimes misguided). And while Europeans occasionally make a show of cracking down on illegal migrants, they generally rely on legal ones to pick their crops.

The thing about Europe is its economy is permanently stuck in the doldrums, a global cautionary tale. And no wonder. Europeans enjoy August off, retire in their prime and spend more time eating and socialising with their families than inhabitants of any other region. Oddly, surveys show people in countries both rich and poor value such leisure time; somehow Europeans managed to squeeze their employers into giving them more of it. Even as they were depressing GDP by wasting time playing with their kids, the denizens of Europe also managed to keep inequality relatively low while it ballooned elsewhere in the past 20 years. Nobody in Europe has spent the past week looking at their stock portfolio, wondering if they could still afford to send their kids to university. Europeans have no idea what “medical bankruptcy” is. Oh, and no EU leader has ever launched their own cryptocurrency.

Huddled masses: have you considered Europe?

The thing about Europe is it is naive, the only global trading bloc attached to moral norms. It insists on complying with the edicts of the World Trade Organisation, say, or doing its part to cut carbon emissions. It is not a place that demands allies come crawling to it begging for “favours” on tariffs.

The thing about Europe is that it is like an open-air museum, yesterday’s continent. Is its model even sustainable? A good question—one that presupposes the European model is worth defending. It is a place blessed with walkable cities, long life expectancies and vaccinated kids who do not need to be trained to dodge school shooters. Charlemagne’s realm is a place of many flaws, lots of them enduring. But in their own plodding way, Europeans have created a place where they are guaranteed rights to what others yearn for: life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. ■

end

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 9:37 a.m. No.22915121   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22915062

its war jim but not as we know it

condolences on your griefs.

many anons have gone through the same and lost loved ones and frens.

ffs get rid of the subsection posting to reddit, facebook and twitter.

hold the line

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 10:07 a.m. No.22915204   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5215 >>5290

ANONS NEED TO FOCUS - BAKERS NEED TO START A DEDICATED PROPAGANDA BUN AND THOSE BIG NAMES BACKING CHINA AGAINST THE USA AND CALLING FOR A REVOLUTION

Note: Anon will provide a example below. a recent chink exposing herself.

==kim iverson just outed herself as a chinky propaganda sneaky plant.

===

We're LOSING The Tariff War With China: How Our Elites Sold Us Out

https://youtu.be/m1IMdY0r4xY

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 10:15 a.m. No.22915236   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5248 >>5256

>>22915215

you need to stop being a fucking retard and take note of experienced anons.

this place is a mess and the kitchen is invested by clowns who run around like X bucks feeding rats for the last crumbs of free usaid bucks.

anon is stating it as a call to anons as the bakers are fucking retarded most of the time if not compromised.

having a bunch of 4chan retards desent here is even moar faggots coming here.

everyone fucking knows halfmind is full of clowns.

faggot

Anonymous ID: e63fe7 April 15, 2025, 10:26 a.m. No.22915290   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22915276

if you cannot attack the message attack the messenger.

explain to anon what you think is wrong with this post.

anons need to focus.

bakers need to started a dedicated bun on those coming out as china shills.

old tired tactic

>>22915204 ←this