Anonymous ID: 80bd39 Feb. 27, 2019, 5:16 p.m. No.5425158   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5223 >>5546

>>5424965

"Valencia Patrice Love, age 47 of Romeoville says she is a friend of #RKelly on his 4 bond slips. She paid a total of $100,000 to get Kelly out of jail. @fox32new," Ewing tweeted on Monday.

 

Love owns the Love On the Blu restaurant in Blue Island, Illinois. She also owns the Lordanchild Christian daycare center on Chicago's Far South Side.

 

Angry customers flooded Yelp.com with negative reviews trashing the restaurant and its owner on Tuesday.

 

One reviewer wrote, "There was a time I thought this place was an okay spot to visit. Decent food, generally nice people. All that changed today."

 

Another reviewer wrote: "Cannot support a business owner that so blatantly and so swiftly supports a rapist and abuser. Better to take your money elsewhere."

 

Ewing spoke with Love amid the backlash on Twitter.com.

 

During their lengthy discussion, Love dropped hints about the source of the bail money.

 

Love said Kelly is "not broke" and he was going to post bond on Thursday anyway.

Anonymous ID: 80bd39 Feb. 27, 2019, 5:23 p.m. No.5425305   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5498 >>5631

>>5425036

23andMe Is Terrifying, but Not for the Reasons the FDA Thinks

 

The genetic-testing company's real goal is to hoard your personal data

 

What the search engine is to Google, the Personal Genome Service is to 23andMe. The company is not exactly hiding its ambitions. “The long game here is not to make money selling kits, although the kits are essential to get the base level data,” Patrick Chung, a 23andMe board member, told FastCompany last month. “Once you have the data, [the company] does actually become the Google of personalized health care.” The company has lowered the price of the kit again and again, most recently from $299 to a mere $99, practically making it a stocking-stuffer. All the better to induce volunteers to give 23andMe the data it so desperately wants. (Currently, the database contains the genetic information of some half a million people, a number Wojcicki reportedly wants to double by year end.)

 

What does 23andMe want to do with all that data? Right now the talk is all about medical research—and, in fact, the company is doing some interesting work. It has been sifting through its genomic database, which is combined with information that volunteers submit about themselves, to find possible genetic links to people’s traits. (The bright-light/sneeze genetic tag is a 23andMe discovery.) More promising are 23andMe’s attempts to recruit people who suffer from certain diseases, such as Parkinson’s and a few types of cancer. Simply through brute-force pattern matching, the company has a chance of finding genetic causes of these ailments, which could lead to a way to combat them. (And perhaps a blockbuster patent or three.)

 

https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/23andme-is-terrifying-but-not-for-the-reasons-the-fda-thinks/

Anonymous ID: 80bd39 Feb. 27, 2019, 5:31 p.m. No.5425423   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5425338

>. Nor (up until his inauguration at least) does he text

 

If your going to lie and spread bullshit at least wait till the end of your post

 

When Donald Trump sent his first Tweet in 2009, Twitter was still a fledgling company

Anonymous ID: 80bd39 Feb. 27, 2019, 5:42 p.m. No.5425602   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5425498

They always try and sell it to us as for our benefit and to make life easier not to mention for our safety because they just love us so much.. just like obamacare .. then stab us in the back and take moar freedoms away