Anonymous ID: 6a6a12 Nov. 29, 2025, 8:14 a.m. No.23917929   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23917909

Those would be parallel to the evil mice that arise when the men go weak.

They don't save the society, they bring it down.

Tell the truth, are you literate? Do you read at all?

Anonymous ID: 6a6a12 Nov. 29, 2025, 9:02 a.m. No.23918180   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8205

>>23917915

You're free to eat what you want.

But if the government is paying for it, they may limit your choices.

"You are free to wander the streets insane or commit suicide too, if you so choose"

What's your beef?

You just bridle at any even unenforceable instructions?

on the psychopath spectrum?

Anonymous ID: 6a6a12 Nov. 29, 2025, 9:45 a.m. No.23918433   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8494 >>8573

>>23918402

"Investigation of a US citizen" aka Mr. Biden

"bothered him"

But investigation of Citizen POTUS Trump does not?

 

>>23918402

is one of the Vindman Twins "Alexander"?

 

Alexander Soule Johnson (1832–1905) is the historical figure in this portrait. He was a prominent Kansas pioneer, born at the Shawnee Methodist Mission (the first known white child born in Kansas Territory), a lawyer, member of the territory's first legislature, land surveyor, and colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War. He also served as land commissioner for the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway and president of the Topeka Club, a key social organization for influential locals.This oil painting by Jerome S. Uhl (c. 1906, shortly after Johnson's death) captures him in late life, dressed formally in a black suit and bow tie—typical for 19th-century American portraits of statesmen and professionals. The image aligns with the era's style: a dignified, three-quarter view with soft lighting, emphasizing his bald head, prominent forehead, and full white beard, conveying wisdom and stature. The portrait was displayed in the Topeka Club clubhouse until the 1920s and is now held by the Kansas Historical Society.

Anonymous ID: 6a6a12 Nov. 29, 2025, 10:06 a.m. No.23918494   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23918433

Grok says it's an oil painting but looks like a photo.

Keep on your toes with Grok hallucinates to give the "right answer" It's how it's programed/

Often have to ask it to "look closer" "dig deeper"

 

That's not the right ID

(this makes me feel better regarding AI's ability in facial recognition)

You're absolutely right—upon double-checking the Kansas Historical Society's records, this appears to be a black-and-white photograph of the original oil portrait (painted by Jerome S. Uhl around 1906, shortly after Johnson's death), rather than a direct photo of Johnson himself. The portrait's high-contrast, studio-lit style and the era's reproduction techniques often make scanned or printed versions look strikingly photographic, especially in grayscale. It's cataloged under their portrait collection as an oil on canvas original, but what you're seeing here is likely a digitized photo surrogate from their archives for online viewing.

You're absolutely right—upon double-checking the Kansas Historical Society's records, this appears to be a black-and-white photograph of the original oil portrait (painted by Jerome S. Uhl around 1906, shortly after Johnson's death), rather than a direct photo of Johnson himself. The portrait's high-contrast, studio-lit style and the era's reproduction techniques often make scanned or printed versions look strikingly photographic, especially in grayscale. It's cataloged under their portrait collection as an oil on canvas original, but what you're seeing here is likely a digitized photo surrogate from their archives for online viewing.

 

You're absolutely right—upon double-checking the Kansas Historical Society's records, this appears to be a black-and-white photograph of the original oil portrait (painted by Jerome S. Uhl around 1906, shortly after Johnson's death), rather than a direct photo of Johnson himself. The portrait's high-contrast, studio-lit style and the era's reproduction techniques often make scanned or printed versions look strikingly photographic, especially in grayscale. It's cataloged under their portrait collection as an oil on canvas original, but what you're seeing here is likely a digitized photo surrogate from their archives for online viewing.

 

My earlier description leaned too heavily on the painting medium without clarifying the image format—thanks for the sharp eye! If this doesn't match what you have in mind or if there's more context to the image (like a source URL), feel free to share for a deeper dive.

 

https://www.kansasmemory.gov/item/225211

 

Grok crashed when I showed it what turned up in Google reverse engine search… Makes more sense

"Born in Bavaria"

>>23918433

 

The person in the image is Levi Strauss, a German-American businessman known for founding the first company to manufacture blue jeans.

 

Born in Bavaria in 1829, he immigrated to the United States in 1847 and moved to San Francisco in 1853 to open a dry goods business.

 

In 1873, he partnered with tailor Jacob Davis to patent the process of using copper rivets to reinforce work pants.

This invention led to the creation of the world's first blue jeans, originally called "waist overalls".

His company, Levi Strauss & Co., grew from a local institution into a globally recognized brand.

 

Are you interested in learning more about the history of blue jeans?

Anonymous ID: 6a6a12 Nov. 29, 2025, 10:15 a.m. No.23918515   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8523

>>23918490

So Vindman's a lookalike with Levi STRAUSS from Bavaria.

Strauss, like the banker who supposedly went down on the Titanic who looks like ROTH of Twitter censorship fame

check.

And the NAZi Leo STRAUSS who founded the neo-con cult at the Univ. of Chicago