Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:05 a.m. No.8636472   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6520 >>6575 >>6630 >>6726 >>6891

>>8636325

I caught 60 Minutes Australia doing the same thing with a different piece of footage used in two separate CV reports. One report from Italy and the other NYC, 2 weeks aparts, using the same video of fake patients.

 

These are not respiratory patients. They are not on ventilators. The equipment is hooked up incorrectly, or not at all. Patients are lying on their faces, practically nude. Bandaging head injuries also not common in CV treatment.

 

Cap 1 from: #60MinutesAustralia

New York: the new deadly epicentre of the coronavirus crisis | 60 Minutes Australia

483,335 views

•Mar 29, 2020 @5:05 https://youtu.be/QtvNc9vhx94?t=305

 

Cap 2 from Inside intensive care unit: Italy fights coronavirus outbreak

1,860,984 views

•Mar 16, 2020 @1:01 https://youtu.be/rfkbv_WQtn0?t=61

Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:10 a.m. No.8636510   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8636491

We've been living in the darkness. The last 10 days have been the darkest in a long time for the normies.

 

Maybe t's already happened? Is tomorrow the day someone asks the Q?

 

Maybe fakenews somehow gets national exposure? Reporters faking news reports, using fake video footage and crisis actors?

 

Just looking for the light like you, fren

Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:24 a.m. No.8636630   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6726 >>6891

>>8636575

Thanks, Baker!

 

>>8636472

Better quality txt here

 

60 Minutes Australia caught re-using fake CV video footage from Italy in their New York CV reporting 2 weeks later.

 

These are two different screencaps, taken from two different videos, both posted by 60 Minutes Australia. The videos were posted 13 days apart. First video claims to be from NYC Elmhurst Hospital, on Mar 29th. The second video claims to be from Italy, on Mar 16th. Both videos use the same b-roll footage. On closer inspection the patients do not appear to be being treated for a respiratory condition.

 

These are not respiratory patients. They are not on ventilators. The equipment is hooked up incorrectly, or not at all. Patients are lying on their faces, practically nude. Bandaging head injuries also not common in CV treatment.

 

Cap 1 from: #60MinutesAustralia - New York: the new deadly epicentre of the coronavirus crisis | 60 Minutes Australia - 483,335 views

 

Mar 29, 2020 https://youtu.be/QtvNc9vhx94?t=305 timestamp - 5:05

 

Cap 2 from: #60MinutesAustralia - Inside intensive care unit: Italy fights coronavirus outbreak - 1,860,984 views

 

Mar 16, 2020 https://youtu.be/rfkbv_WQtn0?t=61 timestamp - 1:01

Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:39 a.m. No.8636751   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8636688

Death worship

Virgin worship

Time worship

Money worship

 

Seeking an infinite amount of each, trying to be a god. And all the followers of those gods, each seeking perfection in their devoted worship.

 

They race to become the Most perfect of all copies of their shattered and distorted view of God.

Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:50 a.m. No.8636837   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6961

Why are actors and actresses called The Talent

 

Is it because they are worth their weight in gold? Is selling oneself into slavery the only way to make a living in Hollywood?

 

Talent(weight)

 

A talent (Latin: talentum, from Ancient Greek: τάλαντον "scale, balance") is an ancient unit of mass. It corresponded generally to the mass of water in the volume of an amphora, i.e. a one-foot cube.

 

The Babylonians and Sumerians had a system in which there were 60 shekels in a mina and 60 minas in a talent (in Ancient Greece one talent was 26 kg of silver). The Roman talent consisted of 100 libra (pounds) which were smaller in magnitude than the mina.

 

When used as a measure of money, it refers to a talent-weight of gold or of silver. The gold talent is reported as weighing roughly the same as a person, and so perhaps 50 kg (110 lb avoirdupois). Some authorities say that the talent typically weighed about 33 kg (75 lb) varying from 20 to 40 kg. In June, 2018, the international price of gold was about US $41,155.69 per kilogram. One gram costs about $38. At this price, a talent (33 kg) would be worth about $1,400,116.57. Similarly, in February 2016, the price of silver was about $15 per troy ounce or about 50 cents per gram, so a 33 kg silver talent would be worth about $16,500. Thus when we read that King Auletes of Egypt paid Gaius Julius Caesar the sum of 6,000 talents of gold to grant him the status of a "Friend and Ally of the Roman People," this amount would be worth about $8,400,699,422.80 USD today! These estimates are only rough values, because they are based on modern estimates.The value of silver in comparison to gold drastically changed. This is because of the output of the Spanish silver mines in the New World. In ancient times the same amount of silver was often worth more than gold. The estimates do not account for the less technical mining ability of the time, nor that there were still native deposits available. Later in Roman history, during the medieval Byzantine period, the emperor Basil II was said to have stockpiled the legendary amount of 200,000 talents of gold which, in modern terms, would be worth approximately $280,023,314,760 USD. At any rate, he did save enough money that the Byzantine government was able to remit all taxes paid during the final two years of his reign.[source?]

 

Another way to calculate the modern equivalent to a talent is from its use in estimating military pay. During the Peloponnesian war in Ancient Greece, a talent was the amount of silver needed to pay the crew of a trireme for one month. Hellenistic mercenaries were commonly paid one drachma for every day of service, which was a good salary in the post-Alexander (III) days. 6,000 drachma made a talent.

 

The talent as a unit of coinage is mentioned in the New Testament in Jesus' parable of the talents. One talent was an incredible amount of money.

 

https://simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talent_(weight)

Anonymous ID: 75c3d7 March 31, 2020, 10:59 a.m. No.8636951   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8636743

Sunscreen + Cosmetics = Makeup

 

As in Makeup (for your losses)

As in Makeup (to cover the damage)

 

Also, sunscreen = (use this to hide your stuff, prevent sun "burn")