Anonymous ID: d25f78 Dec. 7, 2019, 4:36 p.m. No.7450293   🗄️.is đź”—kun

FBI hunt for missing Saudi servicemen as it's revealed Pensacola Naval base killer hosted dinner party to watch mass shooting videos and visited New York to see Rockefeller Christmas tree lights turned on just two days before

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7768107/FBI-hunt-missing-Saudi-soldiers-Pensacola-Naval-base-shooting.html

Anonymous ID: d25f78 Dec. 7, 2019, 4:53 p.m. No.7450428   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>0443 >>0660

>>7450391

This it.

 

“Join, or Die,” by Benjamin Franklin, Pennsylvania Gazette (Philadelphia, PA),

May 9, 1754. Courtesy, Library of Congress

 

This famous “Join or Die” snake, believed to have been created by Benjamin Franklin, has long enjoyed the distinction of being the first political cartoon published in an American newspaper. Few people realize, however, that it can also be viewed as a basic map.

 

The image first appeared in the May 9, 1754, issue of Franklin’s Pennsylvania Gazette. By the 1750s, France and Great Britain had been arguing for years over the extent one another’s landholdings in the Americas. Franklin considered the American colonies to be dangerously fragmented and, through this cartoon and its accompanying article, hoped to convince the American colonies that they would have great power if they united against the threat of French expansion in North America.

 

Admittedly, the “Join or Die” snake does not fit any standard definition of a map. But many basic elements of a map are present. Perhaps the image has been best described at a “cartographic caricature,” or a map generalizing and exaggerating the American colonies’ most recognizable features—namely their locations and coastlines. The colonies are represented in geographic order, with the New England colonies at the head of the snake and South Carolina at its tail. [Note: The New England colonies are not listed individually and Georgia, oddly, does not appear at all.] The undulations of the snake’s body broadly suggest the curves of the North American east coast.

 

https://www.history.org/history/teaching/enewsletter/volume5/november06/primsource.cfm

Anonymous ID: d25f78 Dec. 7, 2019, 5:12 p.m. No.7450583   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Madonna's daughter in orgy at Art basel.

https://pagesix.com/2019/12/07/madonnas-daughter-in-orgy-at-art-basel/

 

Madonna must be proud.

 

Lourdes Leon, the Queen of Pop’s oldest child, took a raunchy page from her mom’s “Sex” book this weekend, performing nearly nude in a simulated orgy during Art Basel in Miami Beach, Florida.

 

The 23-year-old Leon started off Friday night’s bacchanalia wearing a skin-tight tie-dye tank dress with a laced bodice, but soon ditched the outfit for a flesh-toned thong and nipple covers to join the heaving mass of bodies.

 

Video posted to Instagram Saturday morning by Peter Davis, editor in chief of the fashion magazine L’Officiel, shows barely dressed men and women writhing in ecstasy for five long minutes as onlookers wearing protective paper jumpsuits ogle the scene.“At first, it was just couples — a boy and a girl, a girl and a girl, and a boy and a boy,” Davis told The Post.

 

But the show, hosted by Spanish designer brand Desigual and Barcelona-based performance artist Carlota Guerrero, devolved into a PC a “Caligula.”

“Everyone was making out,” Davis said.

“It was inclusive and all body types and everyone was fully making out with everyone.”

The surreal tableau stopped short of anyone doing the deed, Davis stressed.

 

“There was kissing and grinding — everything but X-rated action, which was simulated,” he said.

 

“It lasted maybe five minutes, but it seemed a lot longer and was weird because people were cheering.”

While this was apparently her first public “orgy,” Leon — whose father is Madonna’s ex-boyfriend Carlos Leon — is no stranger to the risqué.

 

By Mara Siegler and Paula Froelich

December 7, 2019 | 5:11pm