Anonymous ID: f4c5ed Jan. 11, 2020, 3:22 p.m. No.7786560   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>7786447

actually indictments are unsealed but they are not the level that would interest the general public and anons. I've seen a lot of medicare fraud and prescription factories. I've seen a couple of NW NWcoast geezers busted for a ponzi scheme. I also saw on on sexual intimidation of renters. I saw on where some Asians (Chinese) with Jewish aliases were running a counterfeit luxury goods import/export counterfitting business. But not one unsealed indictment so far has involved a federal politician. However, CP related arrests are through the roof based on past rates of arrests.

Anonymous ID: f4c5ed Jan. 11, 2020, 4:03 p.m. No.7786856   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6866 >>7071 >>7171

>>7786614

I found this on the london 9 and fits with HRC's narrative.

 

https://www.timeshighereducation.com/blog/first-women-university-remembering-london-nine

 

"At 2pm on Saturday 15 May 1869, the 17 examiners of the University of London gathered at Somerset House on the Strand. Their task that afternoon was an unusual one: to assess and grade the university’s first “General Examination for Women”, which nine candidates had sat earlier that month.

 

The examiners (all men) awarded honours to six of the nine women: Sarah Jane Moody, Eliza Orme, Louisa von Glehn, Kate Spiller, Isabella de Lancy West and Susannah Wood. The remaining three students – Mary Anne Belcher, Hendilah Lawrence and Mary Baker Watson – did not pass the examination. Regardless, all nine were pioneers in women’s higher education.

 

In June 1868, the University of London’s Senate had voted to admit women to sit the General Examination, so becoming the world’s first university to accept women.

 

Candidates were required to pass at least six papers across a range of subjects: Latin, English language, English history, geography, mathematics, natural philosophy, two from Greek, French, German and Italian, and either chemistry or botany. The University ruled that the General Examination would not be “on the whole less difficult than the existing Matriculation Examination”. (Side note: how many of us could ass such a test for college entry? I am only proficient in one language)

 

Despite this, unlike their male peers, on passing the General Examination successful women didn’t receive a degree but a “Certificate of Proficiency”.

 

It would be another decade before women were admitted to the university’s degree programme, with London again the first to offer this option to female students.

Anonymous ID: f4c5ed Jan. 11, 2020, 4:08 p.m. No.7786903   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>7786866

true, but there were recent celebrations of this event. So it would fit HRC to attend one of these london 9 event or at least comment on it.

 

Sometimes thinking like a lib makes things less mysterious. Too bad with all the Islam/Sharia law in the UK the London 9 will soon be the London Zero. Ironic, new Iran will be like the old UK and the UK will be the old Iran.

Anonymous ID: f4c5ed Jan. 11, 2020, 4:11 p.m. No.7786941   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>7786901

Recall all the people with cell phones at the fresh crash site and taking vids and photos. How many got shots of the dead? I would expect these photos and vids to eventually hit the gore sites.