Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 6:38 a.m. No.24593203   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>3231

>>24593176

 

and the only thing widely available that was wireless at that time, were cordless landline phones."

 

this is false.

It's the real term from the old days. "broadcast radio"

to distinguish from private,

They even had walkie talkies back then .. private radio.

 

apparently short wave was used for broadcasting at one point.

Adolf used broadcast radio to good affect; look how it catalyzed a public.

electronic media for Propaganda; haven't seen the end of it.

 

Walkie-talkies were invented in 1937 but became widely available (initially for military use) during World War II, with civilian/commercial versions emerging in the post-war decades.

 

1937: Canadian inventor Donald Hings developed the first practical portable two-way radio, called a "packset," while working for the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company (CM&S) in British Columbia. It was initially designed for remote industrial uses like mining, aviation, and forestry, allowing voice communication over distances.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

1940–1941 (WWII era): The technology advanced rapidly for military needs. Motorola (then Galvin Manufacturing) developed the SCR-300 (a backpack-style model, often credited as the first widely called "walkie-talkie") around 1940 and the SCR-536 "Handie-Talkie" (the first true handheld version) in 1941. These were used extensively by U.S. and Allied forces for battlefield communication.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

Post-WWII (1940s–1950s): Surplus military units entered limited civilian use, but true commercial models for public safety, industry, and construction became more available in the 1950s.

 

relaypro.com

 

1960s onward: More consumer-friendly and compact versions appeared. For example, Motorola's HT-200 (1962) was an early fully transistorized handheld model. By the 1960s–1980s, they spread to broader civilian markets, including recreation and business.

 

weavix.com

 

The term "walkie-talkie" originated during WWII, reportedly from journalists describing the portable devices. Early versions were bulky, used vacuum tubes, and had limited range, but they laid the groundwork for modern two-way radios. Today, they’re common in consumer, professional, and emergency applications.

 

hortwave radio (high-frequency bands roughly 3–30 MHz) became available to the public in the mid-1920s, primarily through amateur/experimental use and early consumer receivers, with broader accessibility and broadcasting growing in the 1930s.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

Key TimelineEarly 1920s: Pioneering experiments demonstrated long-distance shortwave propagation (e.g., Marconi's tests in 1923–1924). Radio amateurs (hams) were among the first to use shortwave for transatlantic and global contacts, starting around 1921–1923 on shorter wavelengths. These were not yet "public" but accessible to hobbyists.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

Mid-1920s: Shortwave reception first reached the general public via frequency converters (accessories added to standard broadcast radios). Dedicated shortwave receivers soon followed. For example, National Radio Company's SW-2 "Thrill Box" regenerative receiver appeared in 1927.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

1930s: Consumer "all-wave" radios (covering broadcast + shortwave bands) became common. By 1936, nearly all console radios and many table models included shortwave. Popular listening and international broadcasting (news, propaganda, relays) boomed, peaking in popularity during this decade. Magazines, clubs, and stations targeted enthusiasts.

 

en.wikipedia.org +1

 

1940s onward: Wartime and post-war developments (e.g., Zenith Trans-Oceanic portables in 1942) made compact models more widespread. The Cold War era (1960s–1980s) was the heyday of international shortwave broadcasting.

 

en.wikipedia.org

 

Shortwave's appeal came from its ability to travel long distances via ionospheric "skip," enabling global listening without cables or satellites. Early sets were often kits or basic regenerative designs; superheterodyne receivers improved performance later. While initially a hobbyist pursuit, it quickly became a way for the public to access international news and entertainment. Today, it's niche but still used in some regions for news and emergency communication.

 

>>24593163

There was ham radio before that.

and short wave.

Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 6:54 a.m. No.24593231   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun

>>24593203

"widely available" yes.

widely popular, no

 

>>24593203

the reason given as to why we are deboosted on X?

They don't want us broadcasting.

A broadcast belongs to the Propaganda, Why?

Because it can blow every other message out of the water with sheer force, which is what the mind controllers need.

Nobody else can broadcast.

This is the root of TDS insanity

Once Broadcasting Networks come clean, the trance will be lifted.

Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 8:23 a.m. No.24593471   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>3487

>>24593309

It's in their blood, instinct.

If you didn't you got beheaded.

All the ones who stayed were the "separate breeding population" of those who cowered.

Two parents, both with one and same trait, in children becomes intensified.

Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 8:29 a.m. No.24593487   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>3512

>>24593471

Didn't mean for that to be about "da jewes"

 

"Gelatin" art collective was scandanavian

European "avant-garde" art is internation.

nine eleven perps make fun of USA. It's help them feel better and avoid a guilty conscious if we are "the Great Satan"

Wait, that's who they worship?

Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 8:37 a.m. No.24593512   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>3520 >>3533

>>24593487

Just sayn' the guy who ran this show was one of the animators who did the CGI plane gimmick.

Rewarded with his own show, which flopped.

"It doesn' make sense, I know. but millions of people saw the plane hit the building"

The Networks are over-due for treason charges?

Anonymous ID: d58c55 May 11, 2026, 8:45 a.m. No.24593532   πŸ—„οΈ.is πŸ”—kun   >>3539 >>3588 >>3610 >>3613

>>24593508

why would "aliens not use numbers"

Sure they wouldn't, math is only the universal language.

and if these are allegedly AI as is promoted, they would be "made" of numbers?

Somebody's a fundamentalist Christian trying to get people to ignore the material

low IQ?

Why would aliens not use numbers?

That's crazy.

Even the Bible has mystic numbers embedded. Everything, that I can tell, does.