Anonymous ID: 71a4ce April 7, 2020, 10:23 a.m. No.8714191   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8714028

HMS Resolute

The Franklin Expedition

Sailors died from an unknown disease and were buried in the Arctic where the soil is frozen all year. Recently an expedition exhumed the preserved bodies and examined them to determine cause of death.

 

Note that the Queen's message also used the term, "RESOLUTE".

 

Comms…

Anonymous ID: 71a4ce April 7, 2020, 10:42 a.m. No.8714297   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8714205

 

It's simple

Ezra was in the DIA clandestine service for 7 years. I expect that a person with that training knows Morse code and knows covert methods of communicating with it. If he says she is not blinking in code, I trust the background of an intel agent.

 

Not to mention that he is one of the authors of Cicada 3301 and he constantly makes images and video clips with embedded comms.

Anonymous ID: 71a4ce April 7, 2020, 10:50 a.m. No.8714342   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4379 >>4394

>>8714212

 

You have not been paying attention to Trump or to Q.

 

UNITED NOT DIVIDED.

The future will not have the communist/capitalist divide in it.

 

Consider this. One of Trump's policies is a core part of the socialist platform. Health Insurance with no pre-existing condition exclusions so that no citizen needs to fear getting sick.

 

But wait!

Isn't that a good policy for a capitalist too?

Would you want your factories staffed by unhealthy workers? Or do you want your workers to be at the top of their game? What if the communist/capitalist divide is a FAKE COMPETITION created by the Cabal to mask the fact that they were PERVERTING both systems into a new feudalism where workers are enslaved?

 

Read up on the history of the Cadbury chocolate company to see how a real father of industry thinks.

 

https://www.cadbury.co.uk/about-bournville

 

In 1847, the Cadbury brothers' booming business moved into a new, larger factory in Bridge Street in the centre of Birmingham.

 

When the Bridge Street factory became too small, George Cadbury had a new vision of the future. 'Why should an industrial area be squalid and depressing?’ he asked. His vision was shared by his brother Richard, and they began searching for a very special site for their new factory.

 

In 1878 the brothers found their new home. They chose a 14½ acre greenfield site between the villages of Stirchley, King's Norton and Selly Oak, about four miles south of central Birmingham. The site comprised a meadow with a cottage and a trout stream - the Bourn. The cottage isn’t there any more, but the pear tree from its garden still stands outside the main Cadbury reception at the Bournville factory. The factory was initially going to be called, Bournbrook, after the cottage and Bournbrook Hall which stood nearby. But instead, 'Bournville' was chosen - combining the name of the stream with 'ville', the French word for town. At Bournville, workers lived in far better conditions than they'd experienced in the crowded slums of the city. The new site had canal, train and road links and a good water supply. There was lots of room to expand, which was lucky, because George’s plans for the future were ambitious. He wanted to build a place full of green spaces, where industrial workers could thrive away from city pollution. 'No man ought to be condemned to live in a place where a rose cannot grow.’ George Cadbury.