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seernewday 3 points ago +3 / -0

Oh the old deranged lone gunman bullshit... Fuck that,,, we know it is not that!

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seernewday 14 points ago +14 / -0

We forgave after WW1, WWII, etc. Not this fucking time. Evil must be exterminated with honest courts and due process but taken out!

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

“Jaw-Dropping Vatican Financial and Sexual Corruption EXPOSED” on YouTube Steve Brady interview https://youtu.be/gzD_BQuYOzE

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

Full display there is zero honor amongst thieves and when your use is lost they will drive the bus over you with glee... the dark side is horrible!

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

It just doesn’t get much more clear; renewables cannot begin to supply the energy needed for AI data centers… cause Mother Nature sends a clearly defined amount of energy to the planet per nanosecond… We can desire to overcome that but outside of nuclear we have found no way so far. Nuclear currently has a uranium shortage challenge (we have written extensively on that). The fossil fuels we consume daily is equal to about 7 years of ancient sunshine! Those are God’s natural laws as we know them to date. … I hate to think in a sinister way… but as Sun Tsu says know your enemy… so what might be the most sinister thoughts and plans hatched due to those thoughts some ask… well the cabal seems intent on nothing less that absolute and total global control of everything they can get their hands on… people make that complicated and messy and so they hope AI, electronic surveillance and other such tools gets rid of as many human tools as possible (i.e. population target noted on the Georgia Guidestones)… To get there they also welcome getting rid of human tools using energy they need for technology… Do I need to say more?

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

You are very correct thorium might hold the key... It remains as far as I know in the research phase so far but when it crosses into commercialization that could be a epic and very welcome game changer!

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seernewday 1 point ago +1 / -0

That was cut and paste from the Zoom article... their boo boo ... my prayer is Canada cause there is an ugly butt fucking going on there

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seernewday 5 points ago +5 / -0

The U.S. is not just a player in the world’s data center industry – we are the dominant force within the global landscape, and it isn’t close. As of March 2024, almost 5,400 data centers exist across fifty-one states in the U.S. The next closest is Germany, which has about one-tenth as many. The number of data centers in the U.S. is nearly 12 times more than in China, a clear testament to the scale and significance of the data center industry in the U.S. and our commitment to remain economically competitive on the global stage over the next century.

It is also critical to highlight that, as the chart above illustrates, most of the U.S. AI activity is at the exploratory level (U.S. AI Exploration rate is 43% v. Deployment rate of 25%), meaning the industry in the U.S. remains in its relative infancy, especially because, as previously mentioned, we have substantially more data centers than any other country in the world. McKinsey also notes that “2023 was the year the world discovered genAI…2024 is the year organizations truly began using, and deriving value, from this new technology.”

Data centers operated by Amazon, Microsoft, and Google reign supreme, collectively accounting for over half of all such centers. In the past year, Amazon and Google have been at the forefront, opening the most new data centers in the United States. Even though they are third, Microsoft boasts a network that “connects more than 60 data center regions, 200 data centers, 190 points of presence, and over 175,000 miles of terrestrial and subsea fiber worldwide, which connects to the rest of the internet at strategic global edge points of presence10.” One hundred and seventy-five thousand miles of fiber sounds like a lot – and it is. The circumference of the Earth at the equator is just a smidge under 25,000 miles – so the third-place data center network represents enough fiber to wrap around the Earth’s equator seven times…

To put the forecasted demand into context, consider this: A recent MIT study found that a single data center consumes electricity equivalent to 50,000 homes. Estimates indicate that Microsoft, Amazon, and Google operate about 600 data centers in the U.S. today…

Arguments exist that by 2030, 80% of renewable power sources will fulfill electricity demand. For reference, the U.S. generated roughly 240 billion kilowatt hours of solar and 425 billion kilowatt hours of wind, totaling 665 billion kilowatt hours in 2023. Assuming a 50/50 split between wind and solar, that scenario implies that, to satisfy the U.S. electricity demand that adequately facilitates AI competitiveness, wind and solar will have to generate approximately 3.4 trillion kilowatt hours of electricity each. That is more than a ten-fold increase over the next five years. The EIA highlights that the U.S. planned utility-scale electric-generating capacity addition in 2023 included 29 million kilowatts of solar (54% of the total) and 6 million kilowatts of wind (11% of the total), which pales in comparison to the estimated amount required.

It just doesn’t get much more clear; renewables cannot begin to supply the energy needed for AI data centers.

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

The Wealthy Families Who Own Canada (Documentary) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tjLIc40w4R4&list=WL&index=2 Note Bronfman/Mega Group/Epstein connection at 37 minute Note Bronfman NXIVM connection 43 minute Note Bronfman Trudeau connection 45 minute

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seernewday 1 point ago +1 / -0

Also see see France is Now Ungovernable Following a Pyrrhic Victory for the Left-Green Alliance

Macron will regret these snap elections. He is the big loser in this.

The ultimate winner in this election will be the party that can stay as far away from the Center/Left catfight as possible.

National Rally is only party that has a chance to stay out of the mess, and that is what I expect them to do.

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seernewday 2 points ago +2 / -0

Also see see France is Now Ungovernable Following a Pyrrhic Victory for the Left-Green Alliance

Macron will regret these snap elections. He is the big loser in this.

The ultimate winner in this election will be the party that can stay as far away from the Center/Left catfight as possible.

National Rally is only party that has a chance to stay out of the mess, and that is what I expect them to do.

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seernewday 6 points ago +6 / -0

Simple as follow the money... who owns the most? Who owns the central banks? Etc.

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seernewday 13 points ago +13 / -0

Federal and district courts across the United States continue to rule in favour of plaintiffs disputing various COVID-19 mandates.

Defendants in the multitude of lawsuits include federal and state institutions, universities, hospitals, airlines and institutions such as the Mayo Clinic.

A federal jury on Monday found Tanja Benton, a former BlueCross BlueShield of Tennessee employee who was fired for refusing to comply with the company’s vaccine mandate, was wrongfully dismissed and awarded a settlement of over $687,000.

Benton "proved by a preponderance of the evidence” she refused the vaccine based on her "sincerely held religious belief," the settlement, obtained by local broadcaster WTVC, states.

The 6th Circuit Court of Appeals , on June 28, confirmed employers that failed to accommodate requests for exemptions from its COVID-19 vaccination policy based on employees’ religious objections violate the law.

Najean Lucky, a non-denominational Christian, was denied employment as a manager for a medical provider because she wouldn’t take the vaccine on religious grounds, and the company would not provide an exemption, per the National Law Review. Lucky sued under Title VII and though her case was initially dismissed, it was reinstated and sent back to the lower courts.

The Mayo Clinic is facing heat for alleged religious bias in enforcing its COVID-19 vaccination policy, along with discriminating against an employee for free speech related issues surrounding the injections.

The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals in May revived a lawsuit that was tossed out last year launched by five former employees alleging the Minnesota-based clinic unlawfully fired them for refusing the vaccine and PCR testing due to their Christian beliefs. The panel of three judges found the lawsuit was wrongly dismissed and the Mayo Clinic failed to acknowledge their objections as sincere.

“The district court erred by emphasizing that many Christians elect to receive the vaccine. Beliefs do not have to be uniform across all members of a religion or acceptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible to others,” wrote Judge Duane Benton in the ruling.

The clinic faces a separate pandemic-era lawsuit, launched by Dr. Michael Joyner, who was suspended from the clinic because he spoke to journalists in a personal capacity about his research, per The Fire. He “failed to communicate in accordance with prescribed messaging,” and was suspended. Minnesota Judge Kathy Wallace on Monday denied most of the clinic’s motion to dismiss Joyner’s lawsuit against the Mayo Clinic, CEO Dr. Gianrico Farrugia and Dr. Carlos Mantilla, per Post Bulletin. A trial by jury is scheduled in July 2025.

The 9th Circuit US Court of Appeal in San Francisco, CA in June sent a school vaccine mandate case back to the lower courts, having ruled in favour of plaintiffs’ claims the mRNA shot is a “medical treatment” and not a “traditional vaccine.”

The US District Court for Northern Texas in Fort Worth in February upheld a Navy Seals' lawsuit over vaccine mandates, despite an earlier court ruling the case is moot, The Texan reported. Members can continue to pursue their case against the Navy for enforcing a COVID-19 vaccination mandate that violated their religious beliefs.

Though the mandate has been lifted, “discriminatory treatment of the class members …because of the mandate still linger,” wrote Judge Reed O’Connor in the court files.

United Airlines faces a $1 billion class action lawsuit for its vaccine mandate based on religious discrimination. A 5th Circuit Texas judge granted on June 21 a nationwide class action suit to more than 2,200 employees suspended without pay for not getting vaccinated, the Washington Examiner reported.

The case is among the largest religious discrimination class action lawsuits in history.

The Ninth Circuit court in the Eastern District of Washington last month ruled lower courts wrongfully dismissed a lawsuit on religious grounds. Judges found lower courts must recognize it was unlawful to dismiss firefighters who refused to comply with the vaccine mandate on religious grounds and then bring in from other districts firefighters who were under a vaccine exemption. It was a violation of those firefighters' religious rights, the court decided, per Religious Liberty TV.

On May 7, the 10th Circuit Court of Appealsfederal court ruled in favour of two employees and 17 students alleging the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus’ COVID-19 vaccination mandate was discriminatory on religious grounds, per the Epoch Times. The case was initially thrown out by a US district judge in 2022. The mandate “clearly violates the Establishment Clause and the Free Exercise Clause as interpreted by our precedents,” judges wrote in their recent decision.

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seernewday 3 points ago +3 / -0

The iris biometric details of citizens will be collected along with fingerprints and facial images when citizens apply for an ID card, according to an article by BiometricUpdate.com, a website that tracks the global movement toward digitization of all things, including human beings.

Vietnam’s Identity Law introduces several key changes, including the mandatory collection of biometric information for citizens applying for ID cards. A clause in the law mandates that assigned state agencies will collect identification data, including facial images, fingerprints, and irises, from applicants. The government says the move is designed to bolster security and accuracy of identity verification processes.

According to Biometric Update:

“The introduction of this law is expected to have widespread implications across various sectors, particularly in banking, which is at the forefront of Vietnam’s digital transformation. With 87 percent of adults in Vietnam holding at least one bank account, according to VOV World, and 95 percent of transactions being processed digitally by many banks, the integration of advanced biometric data into identity verification processes is poised to further streamline digital banking services and enhance customer security.”

The article goes on to state that, “The Law on Identity encompasses several key provisions designed to achieve its objectives including the establishment of a centralized national database that stores the biometric and personal information of all citizens, and provision for the creation of digital identities that citizens can use for online transactions and interactions with government services.”

Read More @ leohohmann.substack.com

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