Anonymous ID: ecac19 March 24, 2020, 9:30 a.m. No.8547145   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun

>>8547026

If this constant harangue and nagging is an example of how you behaved Ivana, it's no wonder he dumped your sorry ass. I would have too. What's wrong? Did you want the fame of being a first lady? Judging by your petty behavior now, we dodged a bullet. Assuming of course that is who you are.

Anonymous ID: ecac19 March 24, 2020, 9:44 a.m. No.8547302   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun

QP# 2491

 

Q

!!mG7VJxZNCI

12 Nov 2018 - 8:13:00 PM

#1 attacked person by FAKE NEWS [+swamp [R+D]]?

POTUS

#2 attacked entity by FAKE NEWS [+swamp [R+D]]?

Q

As of 3:02 pm est today, "Qanon" is now the #2 most attacked entity behind POTUS within the U.S.

[R+D COORDINATED BLITZ ATTACK]

Logical Thinking WHY?

WHY WOULD THE BIGGEST MEDIA CO'S IN THE WORLD CONTINUE TO ATTACK THIS MOVEMENT?

2+2=4

Congratulations, Anons!

YOU ARE NOW THE SECOND BIGGEST THREAT TO THE ESTABLISHMENT.

BADGE OF HONOR!

SOMETHING BIG IS ABOUT TO DROP.

Q

Anonymous ID: ecac19 March 24, 2020, 9:57 a.m. No.8547469   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun   >>7523

Was thinking about the red cross and something clicked in my head. Take a look at what PP is doing. Selling parts etc. Not a big fan of Slate, but they DO hide things in plain site.

 

The Business of Blood

The American Red Cross will have to pay a $4.2 million fine for violating blood-safety laws, the Food and Drug Administration announced Friday. A spokesman for the nonprofit said that revenue from the sales of blood products will be used to pay the fine. Does the Red Cross really sell our blood?

 

Yes. All the centers that supply blood for transfusionsā€”whether theyā€™re part of the American Red Cross or notā€”sell their products to cover operating expenses. Local hospitals work out contracts with regional suppliers or their local Red Cross facility. In general, theyā€™ll work with a single vendor, but they may shop around a bit to find the best prices. Regional suppliers provide about half the nationā€™s blood supply, and the Red Cross kicks in 45 percent. Hospitals generate the remaining 5 percent through their own blood drives.

 

All blood suppliers are nonprofits, and the prices they charge follow the cost of production. Personnel costs make up half the price hospitals pay ā€œat the pumpā€ā€”labor can be very expensive, since staffers must be brought on to recruit donors, collect their blood, and then process it and test it for contamination. The cost of the testing procedures themselves contributes about 25 percent to the final price of blood. Most of the rest goes to administrative overheadā€”rent payments for buildings that house the blood centers, for example. (Most blood banks also mark up a few percent extra so they can keep a little cash on hand.)

 

  • https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2006/09/does-the-red-cross-sell-blood.html

 

The Guys Who Trade Your Blood For Profit

 

This story appears in the July 16, 2012 issue of Forbes.

 

Ben Bowmanā€™s Minneapolis office, in a renovated brick warehouse, is steps from the Mississippi River. But his mind is on a different circulatory system: blood. As usual, heā€™s thinking about wasteā€”1.3 million pints spoil, he claims, and get tossed every year in the U.S.ā€”and about archaic distribution. ā€œCan the market really be this inefficient?ā€ Bowman asks, his voice rising a bit. ā€œI spent at least six months calling people saying, ā€˜Tell me why the marketā€™s like this.ā€™ And the answer we got was, ā€˜This is the way itā€™s always been.ā€™ā€

 

Heā€™s talking about a supply chain that hasnā€™t changed in seven decadesā€”a system his General Blood is trying mightily to disrupt. Instead of relying on collection from local donors, then selling to hospitals within driving distance, why not buy cheaply from centers in Ā­Americaā€™s vast midsection and distribute overnight to hospitals on either coast, underpricing rivals like the Red Cross?

 

But itā€™s not so easy to disrupt a $4.5-billion-a-year business, even a sclerotic one. For one thing, the tide of supply and demand changes as dramatically as Old Muddy. For another, itā€™s tough to dislodge old ways of doing thingsā€”especially in a market where the biggest player, the American Red Cross, controls 44% of the blood supply and has the ability to distribute nationally, depending on the needs of particular areas.

 

  • https://www.forbes.com/sites/erincarlyle/2012/06/27/blood-money-the-guys-who-trade-your-blood-for-profit/#4231257c282e

Anonymous ID: ecac19 March 24, 2020, 10:01 a.m. No.8547523   šŸ—„ļø.is šŸ”—kun

>>8547469

The reason I bring this up is because I think the cabal is getting strapped for cash and I suspect that selling our blood is one of their cash streams and that might be why they are pushing for blood donations, among other possibilities.