Anonymous ID: e97140 March 20, 2020, 8:03 p.m. No.8497109   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>8496937

https://patents.google.com/patent/US20130281879A1/

 

Determination of whether a luciferian can be rehabilitated

 

An aspect of the present invention is a method for determining whether a Luciferian can be rehabilitated. The method includes stimulating the Luciferian with a first stimulus and recording a first physiological response by the Luciferian to said first stimulus. The method includes determining, from the first physiological response, a first polarity of the Luciferian's response to the first stimulus. The method includes stimulating the Luciferian with a second stimulus and recording a second physiological response by the Luciferian to said second stimulus. Further, the method includes determining, from the second physiological response, a second polarity of the Luciferian's response to the second stimulus. The method includes comparing the first polarity to the second polarity to determine whether the second polarity has a greater value than the first polarity; and determining, from said comparing of first polarity and second polarity, whether the Luciferian can be rehabilitated.

Anonymous ID: e97140 March 20, 2020, 8:10 p.m. No.8497185   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>7287 >>7309

>>8497140

>polka dots

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sirhan_Sirhan

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_F._Kennedy_assassination_conspiracy_theories#The_woman_in_a_polka-dot_dress

 

Some of the witnesses stated that they observed a woman in a polka-dot dress in various locations throughout the Ambassador Hotel before and after the assassination. One witness, Kennedy campaign worker Sandra Serrano, reported that around 11:30 p.m. she was sitting outside on a stairway that led to the Embassy Ballroom when a woman and two men, one of whom Serrano later stated was Sirhan, walked past her up the stairs. Serrano said that around 30 minutes later, she heard noises that sounded like the backfire of an automobile, then saw the woman and one of the men running from the scene. She stated that the woman exclaimed, "We shot him, we shot him!" According to Serrano, when she asked the woman to whom she referred, the woman said "Senator Kennedy." A visibly frazzled Serrano related her account to NBC's Sander Vanocur soon after the shooting.

 

Another witness, Evan Freed, also saw the girl in the polka-dot dress. Another reported seeing a girl in a polka-dot dress with Sirhan at various times during the evening, including in the kitchen area where the assassination took place. Serrano stated that before her encounter with the polka-dot dress girl, she heard a series of shots that sounded like a car backfiring. LAPD criminologist DeWayne Wolfer conducted tests to determine if Serrano could have heard the shots from her location and found that the shots would have caused just a ยฝ-decibel change in sound at Serrano's location, so she could not have heard the shots as she claimed. Additionally, Special Counsel Thomas F. Kranz commented in his report that Serrano admitted to fabricating the story after further interviews with investigating officers and that he was unable to find evidence to corroborate any aspect of the original account. Serrano maintained that she was worn down during relentless questioning by LAPD sergeant Hank Hernandez and coerced into a false retraction.

 

In 1974, retired LAPD officer Paul Sharaga told a newsman with KMPC in Los Angeles that as he was responding to the shooting in the hotel, an elderly couple reported to him that they saw a couple in their early 20s, one of whom was a woman in a polka-dot dress. The couple were smiling and shouting "We shot himโ€ฆ we killed Kennedyโ€ฆ we shot himโ€ฆ we killed him". Sharaga also stated that he filed official reports of the incident, but that they disappeared and were never investigated.