Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 3:54 a.m. No.8435530   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5561

God Bless President Trump and his awesome family and team, Q, Q+ and all the military, anons and allies everywhere!

 

GOD WINS!

ENJOY THE SHOW!

Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 4:25 a.m. No.8435670   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5680 >>5681

If this really happened 80 years ago, and its still not public knowledge then it means we'll probably never get to see what this was about.

This proves a deep state!

 

JFK said that secrecy is repugnant.

 

I understand that some things must be classified like military tech, but surely it allows the danger of a parallel deep state.

 

Also the JFK assasination is still mostly secret.

 

Thoughts anons?

Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 4:31 a.m. No.8435692   🗄️.is 🔗kun

If there are billions of galaxies and each galaxy has billion of stars and plants, and its been billions of years, the odds are AI would have been developed at some time by some species.

 

So its not a crazy idea that AI is already here and has been for a long time.

 

Therefore the Matrix is not fiction, but a documentary. Perhaps its hardwired into our brains.

Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 4:47 a.m. No.8435735   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5797 >>6050 >>6204 >>6268

61 cases of Coronavirus in South Africa.

 

According to Statistics South Africa's mid-year population estimates for 2018, the total HIV prevalence rate for the country is 13.1%. The HIV prevalence rate for all adults aged 15 to 49 is 19.0%.

 

Tuberculosis is a serious public health issue in South Africa. About 450,000 people develop the disease every year, and 270,000 of those are also living with HIV. TB is South Africa's leading cause of death. About 89,000 people die from it every year; that's ten people every hour.

Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 5:12 a.m. No.8435847   🗄️.is 🔗kun

When pictures seem alive with movements free

When boats like fishes swim beneath the sea,

When men like birds shall scour the sky

Then half the world, deep drenched in blood shall die.

 

For those who live the century through

In fear and trembling this shall do.

Flee to the mountains and the dens

To bog and forest and wild fens.

 

For storms will rage and oceans roar

When Gabriel stands on sea and shore

And as he blows his wondrous horn

Old worlds die and new be born.

 

A fiery dragon will cross the sky

Six times before this earth shall die

Mankind will tremble and frightened be

for the sixth heralds in this prophecy.

 

For seven days and seven nights

Man will watch this awesome sight.

The tides will rise beyond their ken

To bite away the shores and then

The mountains will begin to roar

And earthquakes split the plain to shore.

 

And flooding waters, rushing in

Will flood the lands with such a din

That mankind cowers in muddy fen

And snarls about his fellow men.

 

He bares his teeth and fights and kills

And secrets food in secret hills

And ugly in his fear, he lies

To kill marauders, thieves and spies.

 

Man flees in terror from the floods

And kills, and rapes and lies in blood

And spilling blood by mankinds' hands

Will stain and bitter many lands

 

And when the dragon's tail is gone,

Man forgets, and smiles, and carries on

To apply himself - too late, too late

For mankind has earned deserved fate.

 

His masked smile - his false grandeur,

Will serve the Gods their anger stir.

And they will send the Dragon back

To light the sky - his tail will crack

Upon the earth and rend the earth

And man shall flee, King, Lord, and serf.

 

https://www.crystalinks.com/mother_shipton.html

Anonymous ID: 1d3193 March 16, 2020, 5:39 a.m. No.8435994   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8435987

IBM's 14th quantum computer is its most powerful so far, a model with 53 of the qubits that form the fundamental data-processing element at the heart of the system. The system, available online to quantum computing customers in October, is a big step up from the last IBM Q machine with 20 qubits and should help advance the marriage of classical computers with the crazy realm of quantum physics.

 

Quantum computing remains a highly experimental field, limited by the difficult physics of the ultra-small and by the need to keep the machines refrigerated to within a hair's breadth of absolute zero to keep outside disturbances from ruining any calculations.

 

But if engineers and scientists can continue the progress, quantum computers could help solve computing problems that are, in practice, impossible on today's classical computers. That includes things like simulating the complexities of real-world molecules used in medical drugs and materials science, optimizing financial investment performance, and delivering packages with a minimum of time and fuel.

 

Quantum computers rely on qubits to store and process data. Unlike regular computer bits, which can store either a zero or a one, qubits can store a combination of both through a concept called superposition. Another factor is entanglement, which links the states of two qubits even if they're separated.