Anonymous ID: 539d96 Jan. 30, 2019, 3:15 p.m. No.4968960   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9245

@realDonaldTrump Tweet Code Decode: Where is Ruth? We Need That Seat

 

https://twitter.com/realdonaldtrump/status/1090571586778923008

 

W I P I S S C A N O N S

 

William Pryor is Supreme Court Anons

 

William Pryor of Alabama, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/president-donald-j-trumps-supreme-court-list/

 

William H. Pryor, who has been acting chair of the United States Sentencing Commission (USSC) since January 3, 2017, was nominated by President Donald Trump on March 1, 2018, to become permanent chair. Pryor has been a judge on the Eleventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta since 2004. USSC is an independent agency in the federal judicial branch that writes sentencing guidelines so that defendants convicted of similar crimes will receive similar sentences in federal courts across the country. USSC has seven voting members appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate. Pryor was first named to USSC by President Barack Obama on April 15, 2013, to a position that expired on October 31, 2017.

 

Pryor’s views of sentencing guidelines have been criticized by some as extreme because he so strongly supports mandatory guidelines that he opposes the right of judges to take into account the individual backgrounds and family histories of defendants. His views are expressed in a speech he gave in 2017, Returning to Marvin Frankel’s First Principles in Federal Sentencing.

 

As acting chair, Pryor has been a conservative, but not divisive, figure. Yet, he once told a cheering crowd, “I became a lawyer because I wanted to fight the ACLU—the Anti-American Civil Liberties Union.” He supports a new effort to increase the penalties related to synthetic drugs like fentanyl and K-2, contending that, “It is important that the sentencing guidelines account for our most current understanding of the chemical structure, potency and effect, trafficking trends, and community impact of these drugs.”

 

Pryor switched to government work in 1995 when Alabama Attorney General Jeff Sessions, who is now U.S. Attorney General, hired him to serve as deputy attorney general. When Sessions won a U.S. Senate seat in 2007, Pryor became attorney general of Alabama. He was elected in 1998 and reelected in 2002, resigning in February 2004 when President George W. Bush appointed him to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals.

 

As Alabama attorney general, Pryor backed efforts to establish the Alabama Sentencing Commission as a way to reform criminal sentences. Reliably conservative, Pryor called Roe v. Wade “the worst abomination of constitutional law in our history,” and in a brief to the Supreme Court warned that if it recognized a constitutional right to homosexual sex, it would “logically extend” to activities like “prostitution, adultery, necrophilia, bestiality, incest and pedophilia.”

 

http://www.allgov.com/news/top-stories/chair-of-the-united-states-sentencing-commission-who-is-william-h-pryor-jr-180430?news=860461

 

On January 25th there was some chatter on the breads about Supreme Court picks.

>>4899729 >>4899755

 

I love doing these decodes because:

I said to a friend, "Donald Trump is communicating to me with secret messages." Friend replied, "HAHAHA…Yeah, right…O.K."

Anonymous ID: 539d96 Jan. 30, 2019, 4:05 p.m. No.4969471   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>9515 >>9526 >>9556

>>4969296

>>4969370

 

There are 2 bodies, a spiritual body and a physical body.

Souls, at some point after conception of a child, enter the body in order to incarnate.

The child is probably well formed at this point, at least 3 months.

That means from 3 months until birth, the soul can enter the physical form.

Both, the physical form before a soul enters and the physical form after a soul enters, are life.

Before a soul enters, the physical form is animated by universal spirit as it grows, until a soul chooses to incarnate in that body.