The significance of Easter was that it was a month or so after Q asked anons
Three months
someone suggested that he say the country was in "Tip-top, tippy-top shape."
The request was "Maybe Q can work the phrase "tip top" into the SOTU as a shout out to the board". Memory can play tricks on you.
I'm sure some anons with dates and post citations can fix my errs and lay details
When people share this information as the God-honest truth I'd rather they correct themselves ;)
And yes those were fun times to be on the board
Wasn't the request specifically for "Tip Top Tippy Top Shape" as cited in the post above?
No. That may have helped sell the proof but the request was for "tip top"
not long after SOTU,
Two months later. Three months after the request.
because it was weird enough to be noticed
Apparently not weird enough for you to have noticed Trump having said it before
The request was just for "tip top", specifically at the SOTU. Trump said it months later at the Easter celebration.
Small details I know, but if you leave blanks people will fill them in and assume it was a more directly filled request.
It was also something he had said in the past as I noted elsewhere.
Except wasn't the first time.
It was put up in 1914, so it does have more historic legitimacy than the confederate statues put up after the civil rights movement.
As for why it's being taken down, if you can look past the name,
The memorial "offers a nostalgic, mythologized vision of the Confederacy, including highly sanitized depictions of slavery," according to Arlington Cemetery.
And in less kind words from the descendants of the person built it:
In a letter to The Washington Post, signed by family members, they stated: "This statue intended to rewrite history to justify the Confederacy and the subsequent racist Jim Crow laws. It glorifies the fight to own human beings, and, in its portrayal of African Americans, implies their collusion."
I'm assuming this is a "that happened" and it was an imaginary gotcha.
Also pretty sure I saw this earlier in the vaccine rollout, so even if it were true, the author hasn't been proven right yet and the friend is probably still laughing at him.
Or maybe it was a "kiss my asphalt" situation.
Calling him just a "co-founder of Greenpeace" leaves out some context.
Patrick Albert Moore (born June 15, 1947) is a Canadian industry consultant, former activist, an early member and past president of Greenpeace Canada. Since leaving Greenpeace in 1986,[2] Moore has criticized the environmental movement for what he sees as scare tactics and disinformation, saying that the environmental movement "abandoned science and logic in favor of emotion and sensationalism".[3] Greenpeace has criticized Moore, calling him "a paid spokesman for the nuclear industry, the logging industry, and genetic engineering industry"[4] who "exploits long-gone ties with Greenpeace to sell himself as a speaker and pro-corporate spokesperson".[5]
(the count was actually 5+ recorded times between 2016 and 2018)