Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 26, 2018, 11:24 p.m. No.3623724   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3738

>>3623688

Daily mail had the article, but when I went to verify the images they had on their site, it wasn't the same guy…So I was still digging to find the correct image for him.. another interesting note here is that he is supposedly on the Director of board of directors for Pueblo Sin Fronteras and yet it lists everyone else, but him. Also doing a view source..comes up with a message that it cannot be viewed in other words that information is banned from the public.

Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 26, 2018, 11:46 p.m. No.3623820   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Political commentator says she reported Cesar Sayoc on Twitter

 

A political commentator and former congressional press secretary claimed she reported the pipe-bomb suspect for harassing her on Twitter, weeks before his arrest Friday. Rochelle Ritchie claims that the social media network sent back a “bs response” when she reported the harassment earlier this month.

 

"Hey @Twitter remember when I reported the guy who was making threats towards me after my appearance on @FoxNews and you guys sent back a bs response about how you didn’t find it that serious," she said. "Well guess what it’s the guy who has been sending #bombs to high profile politicians!!!!" pic.twitter.com/xBY8FMbqnq — R O C H E L L E (@RochelleRitchie) October 26, 2018

 

Ritchie posted screenshots of the alleged incident. The account referenced, reported to be Sayoc's Twitter handle in the wake of his arrest, was suspended Friday. A Twitter spokesperson told the Washington Examiner that the company doesn’t comment on individual accounts due to privacy and security reasons and noted that “this is an ongoing law enforcement investigation.”

 

Cesar Altieri Sayoc, Jr., of Aventura, Fla., was arrested Friday at an AutoZone store in Plantation, Fla., in connection with the suspicious packages that were sent to figures including former President Barack Obama and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Sayoc is a registered Republican and last voted in the 2016 primary election and has previously been arrested multiple times since 1991.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/political-commentator-says-she-reported-cesar-sayoc-on-twitter

Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 27, 2018, 12:02 a.m. No.3623883   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Kamala Harris' press secretary Tyrone Gayle dies from colon cancer

 

Tyrone Gayle, the press secretary to Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., died of colon cancer Thursday evening. In a statement Friday , the California Democrat said she was "heartbroken" to lose Gayle, whom she said had been "an invaluable and beloved member of our team and our family" since she was sworn in as a senator in January 2017. “Tyrone started with me on Day 1 in my Senate office and cared so deeply about the people we fight for every day. For Tyrone, nothing was too small to do or too big to take on. He did this work tirelessly, always with a smile or a kind gesture. And he never lost faith in our ability to do good for the people in this country. Tyrone is irreplaceable," Harris said. “We have suffered a great loss and I wish Tyrone’s family — and in particular his courageous wife, Beth — my love and condolences at this difficult time.”

 

Gayle was diagnosed in 2016 campaign contest, when he was a spokesperson for Hillary for America. Both former Secretary of State and 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton and Sen. Tim Kaine mourned the loss. "He was one of the fiercest fighters we will ever know," Clinton said in a series of tweets. "Whatever he did, he did with his whole heart — whether he was running sprints, planning his wedding to the love of his life, rooting for his beloved Clemson Tigers, or working to build an America as kind, compassionate, and big-hearted as Tyrone himself. "He spent his 30 years doing all the good he could, in all the ways he could, for as long as he could. Our prayers are with Tyrone’s family, especially his wife, Beth, and their huge community of devoted friends," she added. "We are forever grateful to have known him and will always be proud members of #GayleNation."

 

Gayle previously worked for Kaine when he ran his successful 2012 Senate campaign. "All who crossed Tyrone’s path were affected by his warmth, humor, and positive energy. Just yesterday, while visiting a Virginia company, I met one of Tyrone’s roommates and track teammates from Clemson and we shared great stories of our friend," Kaine said on Facebook. Kaine also said it was "one of the honors of my life" to officiate Gayle's wedding to Beth Foster only six months prior.

 

Online fundraising efforts organized by Jesse Lehrich, who according to Roll Call is a fellow former Clinton spokesman and friend of Gayle's, raised tens of thousands of dollars for Gayle for medical expenses and memorial arrangements.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/kamala-harriss-press-secretary-tyrone-gayle-dies-from-colon-cancer

Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 27, 2018, 12:06 a.m. No.3623900   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>3623810

Another observation made looking at the images:

Investigators weren't wearing gloves, which is also typical for an investigate where evidence is concerned..

Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 27, 2018, 12:14 a.m. No.3623943   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4055 >>4259 >>4340

Grassley on Avenatti: ‘I want him to be the Democratic candidate’ vs. Trump in 2020

 

Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, said Friday that he hopes Michael Avenatti becomes the Democratic standard-bearer in the 2020 presidential primary the day he served a criminal referral against the lawyer and Julie Swetnick for what he believes were materially false claims against Justice Brett Kavanaugh. “I want him to be the Democratic candidate,” Grassley said in an interview Friday. “So It finally shows how ridiculous the base of the Democratic Party is.” Avenatti is "a good public relations man, opposite of the good that Trump does. But Trump’s just as good,” Grassley said, comparing the lawyer’s ability to garner media attention with the president’s own media savviness.

 

The Senate Judiciary Committee chairman made waves Thursday when he referred Avenatti and Swetnick for investigation by the DOJ, saying that the two were not “well-meaning” by bringing the allegations forth. He said his initial referral was a push to deter individuals from lying to Congress in the future. “To emphasize to anybody that wants to give a sworn statement to Congress that they better not lie. When you take those sworn statements, you don’t just accept the statement. You have to follow up,” Grassley said. “We ought to have an ethic [that] you don’t lie to Congress. We’ve got a law against it.”

 

Since Grassley referred the two for a possible probe, Avenatti has proclaimed the investigation to be good news since Swetnick’s allegations will be looked into, calling it “Christmas in October.” In his referral, Grassley pointed to Swetnick’s subsequent backtrack of her sworn affidavit in an interview with NBC News. He also referred the outlet’s report released a day earlier noting that one individual purported to back up Swetnick's claims also backtracked and said that Avenatti was twisting her words. Grassley referred the two for a second investigation on Friday.

 

He also hit back at claims from Avenatti that Kavanaugh was not investigated prior to his confirmation, arguing that the Judiciary Committee spent ample amount of time looking into Kavanaugh overall. “It’s got nothing to do with the claims. It’s got something to do with lying to Congress … For instance he said we ought to investigate Kavanaugh. Well, they had 32 hours to investigate Kavanaugh, and they had 4-5 hours with Dr. Ford. No, this is all about lying to Congress.”

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/news/congress/grassley-on-avenatti-i-want-him-to-be-the-democratic-candidate-vs-trump-in-2020

Anonymous ID: d8972b Oct. 27, 2018, 12:27 a.m. No.3624002   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Shall We Add A Little Lithium To The Water Supply?

 

A Tufts psychology professor and Harvard Medical School lecturer has recommended dosing US water supplies with the lithium in order to reduce suicide rates, saving an estimated 15,000 - 25,000 lives per year. Appearing on the Vox podcast "Future Perfect," psychiatrist and researcher Dr. Nassir Ghaemi, MD explains that a 2014 review he co-authored analyzing five studies concluded that areas of the country with higher levels of naturally occurring lithium in the water supply had lower suicide rates. Areas with particularly high concentrations have as much as a 50 to 60 percent reduction.

 

"In general, in the United States, lithium levels are much higher in the Northeast and East Coast and very low in the Mountain West," Ghaemi told Vox, adding "And suicide rates track that exactly — much lower suicide rates in the Northeast, and the highest rates of suicide are in the Mountain West." If you apply that 50 to 60 percent reduction to the US, where about 45,000 people total died by suicide in 2016, you get a total number of lives saved at around 22,500 to 27,000 a year. That’s likely too high, since you can’t reduce suicide rates in places that are already high-lithium. Ghaemi’s own back-of-the-envelope calculation is that we’d save 15,000 to 25,000. Ghaemi and a number of other eminent psychiatrists are making a pretty remarkable claim. They think we could save tens of thousands of lives a year with a very simple, low-cost intervention: putting small amounts of lithium, amounts likely too small to have significant side effects, into our drinking water, the way we put fluoride in to protect our teeth. -Vox

 

Experts don't agree While Ghaemi is confident in the life-saving effects of making everybody comfortably numb, several other studies have placed the possible positive effects at minimal to nil. '' In 2015, the Open Philanthropy Project, a large-scale grantmaking group in San Francisco, shared an analysis with me implying that if two specific studies were right, a “small increase in the amount of trace lithium in drinking water in the U.S. could prevent 4,000 suicides per year.” That’s significant, but far short of 15,000 to 25,000.'' And while Ghaemi is very enthusiastic about the potential of groundwater lithium, other researchers are more wary. A comprehensive list of lithium studies, updated just last month, shows that while many studies find positive effects, plenty more found no impact on suicide or other important outcomes. In particular, a large-scale Danish study released in 2017 found “no significant indication of an association between increasing … lithium exposure level and decreasing suicide rate.” -Vox

 

n response to the new studies, the Open Philanthropy Project has said that the Danish study "makes us substantially less optimistic" that trace amounts of lithium actually reduce suicides. Meanwhile, another study using health care claims in teh US found that more lithium in the water doesn't translate to lower diagnoses of dimentia or bipolar disorder. That said, Vox's Dylan Matthews writes: "At the very least, I’d love for some governments to conduct real, bona fide experiments on lithium. Maybe a state could randomly add lithium to some of its reservoirs but not others, or, conversely, a high-lithium state could try removing it from the water. There are serious ethical questions about doing experiments like this that affect whole populations, but if lithium’s effect is real and we don’t pursue it because we lack compelling enough evidence, thereby endangering thousands of people — that’s an ethical problem too."

 

https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-10-26/shall-we-add-little-lithium-water-supply