Anonymous ID: 75d378 May 5, 2020, 10:09 a.m. No.9039567   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9039490

This√√√√√√√

I said there are exemptions ppl can claim as you are protected under the law by either handicap or religion. You cannot be discriminated against… take it to the Supreme Court. So, you can fight, get a lawyer, protest at the Capitol, and maybe get arrested. But most won't bother because [they] always make it easier to comply.

Anonymous ID: 75d378 May 5, 2020, 10:14 a.m. No.9039646   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9039558

Here's the thing: You can almost always trap your opponent by going along with their nonsense until it backfires on them. We've seen POTUS do this countless times.

 

He is saying "we need a vaccine quickly" because they are screaming for a vaccine. But by the time it arrives, it will either (a) not work because CV is gone and there is a new strain, or (b) they won't want it anymore because they realize that they need the virus to keep keeping people and shutting down the economy.

 

They think that we don't want vaccines, and so POTUS won't want one, either. (He's said as much in the past). So by being on their side of the issue, they HAVE to change their stance.

 

Nothing ever changes in this back-and-forth.

Anonymous ID: 75d378 May 5, 2020, 10:40 a.m. No.9040032   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9039987

 

Life Imitating Art? Strange Cases Where Fiction has Foretold the Future

 

Between 1949 and 1950, American novelist Norman Mailer was hard at work crafting the follow up to his breakthrough novel, The Naked and the Dead. His home and base of operations at the time had been a boarding house in New York, and the subject of this new work that would eventually become 1951’s Barbary Shore was, rather transparently, reflective of Mailer’s current state of affairs: the story was that of a World War II veteran, holed up in a New York boarding house, trying to write a novel.

 

To his credit, Mailer had added amnesia to his character’s plight, but this alone hadn’t helped make the post-war novel anything more spectacular than what it was destined already to be: a shortcoming in the wake of his breakthrough masterpiece, and one so bad it would launch a decade-long hiatus from work as a novelist, during which Mailer would turn his attention to societal themes, writing of (and occasionally berating) hipsters, politicians, and American life in general.

 

The otherwise innocuous and disappointing Barbary Shore might have been forgotten altogether, had it not been for one other unique facet it possessed. As much as the story had intentionally mirrored the happenings of Mailer’s life, there were other things occurring beneath the surface which the author included, though seemingly despite having no way of gaining knowledge of them at the time.

 

https://mysteriousuniverse.org/2015/11/life-imitating-art-strange-cases-where-fiction-has-foretold-the-future/