Yeah, but an HOA doesn't mean you agree to constant petty harassment.
Some HOAs get along just fine with the people there. Without knowing the personalities and the actual HOA agreement, it's hard to judge. He could be a horrible neighbor. Leaving eggs to rot in your neighbors yard isn't cool. But his home doesn't look like an eyesore to me, and the video is pretty funny.
If it was a hidden cache, they could do a daytime raid - simply no need for flash bangs and nighttime helicopters.
But unless we get to look at videos from anons who were close by, we'll probably never know.
The Orange County raid is more intriguing, just because there was less said about it.
I'm hopeful it really was training, for imminent martial law.
An op in an abandoned hospital? Honestly an abandoned hospital sounds like a training exercise, because there's no reason for an actual op if the site is truly abandoned.
That said, even if it's a straight-up training exercise, doing it in such a crowded urban area (instead of abandoned buildings out in the desert) indicates something. Maybe we are indeed close.
It's even sillier than that, because the paper ballots at the polling center are all digitally recorded at the time the ballot is generated. In other words, you go to the polling center; receive a blank sheet of paper; insert that blank paper into a computer; enter your voting selections on a touch screen computer; the computer then prints your ballot elections on the paper and shows it to you (but you can't remove it from its special tray); you click yes to agree to the printout; computer then sucks the paper back inside its printer, and you're all done except for the "I voted" sticker to make you feel like an excited third grader all over again.
So most of these ballots are recorded on a computer before they take them away for counting.
Holy shizzles! They appear and reappear like ads for unpronounceable drugs with tiny print side effects!
But seriously, if they're by one (or two) posters, you can hit the "block" button and they'll all disappear. If you miss them later on (yeah, right), you can toggle them back on.
Fluoride to prisoners in concentration camps doesn't make sense even according to the author's premise: there is no need for psychological manipulation when the people you deal with are prisoners under direct physical control. Helpless prisoners under armed guard don't require pacification.
Reading the post quickly, I overlooked the camps and assumed the intent was to augment propaganda used on the German people, which would jive with the purported psychological manipulation angle.
I've never heard of the rollercoaster of death, and I'm glad I didn't: I might laugh at the wrong time. I'm okay being considered crazy, but try to be strategic about it.
I still don't like fluoridation, but I'll pull back on using this piece as an argument. Thanks.
Decent read. Extra keks for the dei word replacing chairman.
Here is a typical timeline:
Election Day: everyone votes
Week 1: mail in ballots, absentee ballots, military ballots, overseas ballots, ballots accidentally issued to people’s pets, and ballots harvested from Skid Row start trickling in.
Week 2: As the ballots pile up, Officials consider appointing a Committee to Count Ballots.
Week 3: Committee to Count Ballots is appointed and commences discussion on electing a chairman.
Week 4: deadline for ballots from illegal immigrants.
Week 5: Committee decides that “chairman” is an outdated term and will be replaced by a term to be decided later once the Committee to Count Ballots Diversity Consultants finishes their report.
Week 6: fraudulent ballots from the Chinese Communist Party arrive.
Week 7: The Committee elects as Chairzerxon a nonbinary disabled child to count the ballots.
Week 8: it is discovered that the Chairzerxon does not actually know how to count.
Week 9: the ballots are thrown away and the Committee announces election results that are entirely made up.
Which part: the purpose of fluoride, i.e. pineal gland calcification, or the Nazi origin? Or the whole thing?
I'm confident I don't need fluoride, and that the practice of fluoridating water is not performed in many other countries, so that part of the info is directly observable. But the rest of the post depends on either trust or research that I haven't personally done.
Maybe. I think by any definition the illegals paying off cartel debt are cartel victims more than rico conspirators. Also, a huge portion of illegals, by far the majority, aren't paying off cartel debt (and the ones that are, don't have bank accounts big enough to matter anyway).
But these are just semantics and potentially differences in timing and degree. The overall movement is to deny illegals' access to banking services, which is needed. So overall it's a good thing. I just don't like headlines like this that exaggerate so much that it's practically lying.
For those interested in the details, the article doesn't match the headline. The order strengthens KYC (know your customer) requirements which can prevent illegals from opening new accounts, but it says nothing about seizing and freezing.
That might happen eventually, but this measure is merely a prelude. A good start though: it sets up the bank infrastructure that will be needed to perform the freeze and seize ops, if those happen.
It was pointed out to me that the "Rally to End All Rallies" on June 24th is exactly ten days before Independence Day.
Are we all looking forward to that ten day forecast: darkness? Archive everything offline, just in case!