Anonymous ID: ea6f22 April 22, 2020, 5:14 a.m. No.8882976   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8882834

If there is no sauce, this becomes a message board.

We may as well just sign up for the 4am drops and get back to Netflix; no different than MSM.

 

Be Best

Anonymous ID: ea6f22 April 22, 2020, 6:01 a.m. No.8883226   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8883140

ThankQ Anon. This was great to read. Been around for a couple years, but didn't know all the background. Just tried to dig, read drops and stay out of the way of grumpy Anons.

This is not a place for the feint-hearted. Kek!

Anonymous ID: ea6f22 April 22, 2020, 6:05 a.m. No.8883239   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8882943

Grad students dug through paperwork and tried to draw conclusions. That isn't science at any level.

 

We call it spitballin' here

 

Somehow the media sees it as truth from God. Our country has needed the Plan for a long, long time, Anons!

you were chosen to be here

Anonymous ID: ea6f22 April 22, 2020, 6:33 a.m. No.8883405   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8883090

Interdasting. The Chinese referred to our flag (Betsy Ross one) as the Flower flag, unlike the Europeans we came in peace with state dept level people:

 

"Flower Flag" arrives in Asia

 

The U.S. flag was brought to the city of Canton (Guǎngzhōu) in China in 1784 by the merchant ship Empress of China, which carried a cargo of ginseng.[54] There it gained the designation "Flower Flag" (Chinese: 花旗; pinyin: huāqí; Cantonese Yale: fākeì).[55] According to a pseudonymous account first published in the Boston Courier and later retold by author and U.S. naval officer George H. Preble:

 

When the thirteen stripes and stars first appeared at Canton, much curiosity was excited among the people. News was circulated that a strange ship had arrived from the further end of the world, bearing a flag "as beautiful as a flower". Every body went to see the kwa kee chuen [花旗船; Fākeìsyùhn], or "flower flagship". This name at once established itself in the language, and America is now called the kwa kee kwoh [花旗國; Fākeìgwok], the "flower flag country"—and an American, kwa kee kwoh yin [花旗國人; Fākeìgwokyàhn]—"flower flag countryman"—a more complimentary designation than that of "red headed barbarian"—the name first bestowed upon the Dutch.[56][57]