Showed a friend Q's latest drops from last night. He doesn't believe 100% but is open enough..moreso than anyone else I know. Yesterday he says "same shit from this Q guy, when does he stop with the feel good stories and some of this shit actually take place?"
I didn't have an answer as I do not know and wonder that myself quite often. Trust the plan isn't good enough. I wouldnt accept that if I were him.
OMG. I'm on the fence with this all, but I can tell you right now Q is going to own this group.
You cannot have individual thoughts on this board anymore. Hive mind only. Even after Q tells these characters to truth and believe themselves, they can't do that. They need someone or something to flock to. Annoying as fuck. Maddening.
Going public is nonsensical unless some sort of solidified, real, actual proof comes out soon. Not another redacted report. Not another circle jerk of promises on greatawakening, not another cutesy name for the month, not another drop stating the same shit that you have been stating for almost a year.
Something needs to happen soon. Because Q supporters are now getting harassed for being such. Free speech is being pulled away from us, and everyone here sits with a thumb up their ass waiting for this knight in shining armor to come out of the clouds for us.
Right. EVERYONE HERE IS A SHILL OMGS HE ASKED A QUESTION THAT DOESNT SUCK OFF Q, SHIIIIILLLl!!!!!!
I'm interested. But I've seen enough horrific shit that nothing has been done about to see even more.
No. But yes. It's real, but it's hilarious.
Sheldon Gary Adelson (pronounced /ˈædəlsən/; born August 4, 1933) is an American business magnate, investor, and philanthropist. He is the founder, chairman and chief executive officer of Las Vegas Sands Corporation, which owns the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore, and is the parent company of Venetian Macao Limited, which operates The Venetian Resort Hotel Casino and the Sands Expo and Convention Center. He also owns the Israeli daily newspaper Israel Hayom and the American daily newspaper Las Vegas Review-Journal.[2] Adelson, a lifelong donor and philanthropist to a variety of causes, also founded the Adelson Foundation in 2007, at the initiative of his wife, Miriam. He is a member of the Republican Party, and made the largest single donation ever to an incoming president's inauguration when he gave the Trump inaugural committee five million dollars.[3]
As of June 2018, Adelson was listed by Forbes as having a fortune of US$43.4 billion,[1] making him the 16th-richest person in the world. He is a major contributor to Republican Party candidates.[4][5] He has been the largest donor, of any party, in both the 2012 and 2016 presidential campaigns. He had sat out the Republican primary season for the 2016 presidential election and on September 23, he announced a $25 million donation to Donald Trump's 2016 presidential campaign, making him the largest donor to the Trump campaign and the largest donor in the presidential election[6] (although this was less than the $100 million donation some had initially predicted).[7]
Marina Bay Sands, isn't that where Kim Jong went?
You must of asked a question.
You must have asked a question?
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/larison/adelsons-deranged-iran-comments/
The biggest donor to Republican Party political groups said Tuesday that the United States should drop a nuclear bomb on Iran to spur the country to end its own nuclear program.
Now it’s not especially interesting that a hawkish fanatic supports doing something insane and immoral, but what struck me about the video of Adelson’s remarks at Yeshiva University was the applause that greeted what he said. One would expect Adelson to hold ridiculous and obnoxious views about attacking Iran, but it is far more troubling that any of the people listening to his remarks thought that the idea of launching an unprovoked nuclear first-strike and threatening further nuclear attacks was a good one worth considering. Adelson’s fellow panelists and the panel moderator don’t object to anything he says, and the follow-up question from the moderator (Rabbi Shmuley Boteach) treated the suggestion as if it were a normal proposal for demonstrating American “strength.” No one appears to have been the least bit put off by the idea of gratuitously using nuclear weapons to force Iran into compliance with U.S. demands.
The episode is instructive in a few ways. First, this is the sort of deranged statement that receives a respectful hearing on the right and among Iran hawks more generally, and it is one to which our hawkish politicians feel obliged to pander. No one would care what Adelson has to say about this or any other issue if he weren’t a substantial donor to Republican candidates and organizations, but he is. It also conveys the egregious double standard in the Iran debate on the possession and use of nuclear weapons: not only are some states not permitted to develop even the capability to build such weapons, but those states that possess nuclear weapons presume to have the right to launch illegal attacks on those that don’t. Adelson is expressing in a more appalling way the belief that the U.S. has the right to inflict destruction on Iran to “prevent” it from acquiring weapons that it is not yet actively seeking.
That's a terrible joke. But…KEK