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Post by moksha on Apr 1, 2020 11:10:00 GMT
In knowing what President Trump is doing to stop his nation’s banks from being able to finance any more wars, this report details, his globalist-socialist enemies in the US Congress inserted into this rescue package a provision to establish a “special inspector general” to oversee who gets the trillions-of-dollars of relief—a move designed to siphon off some of these rescue package monies to aid banks whose only option for rescue is the US Federal Reserve now totally under the control of President Trump—but when signing this rescue package into law, saw President Trump sending this provision down in flames when he exerted his Executive Branch wartime powers and wrote in open defiance of these globalist-socialist US lawmakers in his signing statement: “I do not understand, and my Administration will not treat, this provision as permitting the [inspector general] to issue reports to the Congress without the presidential supervision required by Article II of the Constitution”—a decisive move President Trump then followed by placing all of these trillions-of-dollars of rescue monies under the total control of the Pentagon he oversees as its Commander-in-Chief.
Let he who has eyes see and ears hear
Yes "VERY NICE" indeed. Any news on the loan payment record as of yet?
HEAR and SEE, the very long list.
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Post by SysConfig on Apr 1, 2020 11:28:13 GMT
SysConfigs Point > Counterpoint < for your consideration.. I am sure he will profit from the Corona Virus just as his puppets Pelosi, Feinstein, Burr, and others have.. AnonymousJanuary 16, 2015 at 6:28 AM You guys miss the point, George S is a hedge fund manager. Hedge funds are posting records profits. Why, current political policies have pushed up the stock market. All hedge fund managers are doing what George S is doing. At our expense, they are all the face of evul in the 21st Century. AnonymousFebruary 28, 2016 at 8:12 AM George Soros DOES NOT OWN these companies. He may have stock in those companies, but he does NOT OWN them. This list is absolutely ridiculous. He does have his fingers in a LOT more pies than he should be allowed to, and he does use his influence for far-left type issues. He is an EVIL man, and cohorted with the NAZI's against his own people in WW2 era. (FACT.) He has delusions of dominating the world, from the background, and is probably psychotic and Pathological, but... when you are outrageously Wealthy, these are the things that get your motor running. I would suggest a more reliable source of information than this. UnknownJune 8, 2016 at 9:08 AM These are companies he may own shares in but he doesn't own the controlling shares in the ones that I recognize. What matters is he must have massive dividends rolling in and unless we boycott massive amounts of products including life saving pharmaceuticals there is no way we can interrupt this man's funding of the destruction of the United States. I have no idea why this man hates America so much but if America didn't exist this man would never have obtained the wealth he currently has. He would be an owned piece of property under the thumb of aristocracy. I hope this man takes a sniper shot from a .50 cal to the groin. That will instill the type of terror lunatics like him need to behave himself. UnknownNovember 11, 2016 at 11:31 AM George Soros is a wanted man in Russia, citing him and his organizations as a "threat to Russian national security." Putin banned Soros due to the fact that Soros helped to nearly destroy the Russian economy in the early 1990's. Magyar1984November 14, 2016 at 3:30 PM I am Hungarian and so is George Soros. I am ashamed to say that, although I can assure you that there isn't one more person like this in Hungary just general average people. I think he was not well received in the U.S. in spite of his money, and that probably made him hate the country also. And as someone here said, he is probably has megalomania - meaning that he thinks he can control the world and make changes the way he wants it. Truly something needs to be done, like boycott the companies he owns. This sends chills down on my spine, this amount of money and power and bad will. UnknownNovember 16, 2016 at 11:07 AM I can tell from one Company listed I worked for 25 years ago • Columbus McKinnon Corp. This company was a leverage buyout by their employees and the lender was a Hedge fund who might have been Soros controlled. Later that company was bought by a competitor. This shows how complicated can be to determine ownership.
Conclusion:
No Trump is not in his pocket old loan or not
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Post by mryelm on Apr 1, 2020 13:14:37 GMT
Hi thelmadonna. You said
'I imagine it would be good for everybody, especially those without a garden, with no access to sunlight.'
Thanks for the info! I just want to add something. After my M/C accident I was practically bed ridden for nearly a year (with short breaks in between operations). Still I was surprised when the VA found I was so low in vitamin D (the sunshine vit.) it could cause symptoms*. This is just a note for a heads up to make sure that is included in a blood draw. I'm not sure if low vitamin D is tested for in a standard blood draw or CBC (complete blood chemistry.), so I always ask. (I ask for many more that are not included on standard tests at the aghast of my VA primary care DR.
Everyone stay safe !
* symptoms (of low Vit. D) From the web;
1...Getting Sick or Infected Often.
2....Fatigue and Tiredness. Feeling tired can have many causes, and vitamin D deficiency may be one …
3.....Bone and Back Pain. Vitamin D helps maintain bone health in a number of ways. For one, it …
4......Depression.
wow! give me a jug of that stuff!
;{>
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Post by mryelm on Apr 1, 2020 13:23:47 GMT
SysConfigs I like members that disagree or have different viewpoints than I. Diversity and disagreement permits an opportunity to learn or be exposed to ideas and concepts I wouldn't even consider if left to my own devices. And I am sure everyone knows mutual respect goes a long way to promote communication and leads to productive dialog. That's two (of many) reasons I like this forum.
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Post by moksha on Apr 1, 2020 13:33:07 GMT
Thank you SYS I never said he was in the pocket. You made my point We need to know what this creep owns And what his plans are. .
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Post by Deleted on Apr 1, 2020 19:24:51 GMT
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Post by mryelm on Apr 1, 2020 21:45:39 GMT
I am sure China and Russia are eyeing this thing carefully. Before the bomb, wars were started in this kind of conditions. WWI was started for far less! In the WW2 era nations facing a hopeless or seriously difficult situation while another nation in fairly good shape twiddles its thumbs offering no help invited war. Japan neeed resources and the USA were denying them access (I would have as well, Japan of the WW2 era was a brutal country* with little resemblance to todays japan)I know God or our ET friends were intervening as the USSR failed. How we escaped nuclear world war started by USSRs hard line suicidal renegade generals etc. I don't know, unless it was a miracle. I am still nervous that China is not really over the C-virus and is just waiting to ambush the world by pushing the button rather see their nation go the way of USSR. Lastly I am not so naïve to think the USA could not be the evil one, why all the billions of rounds of ammo warehoused, and the huge camps? I am an equal opportunity conspiracy nut!
*...…".Japan of the WW2 era was a brutal country" ;
The Rape of Nanking www.history.com/this-day-in-history/the-rape-of-nanking
:{>
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Post by nyx on Apr 2, 2020 1:59:55 GMT
The “800 pound gorilla” in the room is the question why does God let bad things happen to good people?
The coronavirus knows no boundaries such as religion, race, or wealth.
This coronavirus will only be stopped when a vaccine becomes available, by then thousands will die.
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Post by ZETAR on Apr 2, 2020 2:14:05 GMT
Arnold Toynbee, (born April 14, 1889, London—died Oct. 22, 1975, York, North Yorkshire, Eng.), English historian whose 12-volume A Study of History (1934–61) put forward a philosophy of history, based on an analysis of the cyclical development and decline of civilizations, that provoked much discussion.Toynbee began his Study of History in 1922, inspired by seeing Bulgarian peasants wearing fox-skin caps like those described by Herodotus as the headgear of Xerxes’ troops. This incident reveals the characteristics that give his work its special quality—his sense of the vast continuity of history and his eye for its pattern, his immense erudition, and his acute observation. In the Study Toynbee examined the rise and fall of 26 civilizations in the course of human history, and he concluded that they rose by responding successfully to challenges under the leadership of creative minorities composed of elite leaders. Civilizations declined when their leaders stopped responding creatively, and the civilizations then sank owing to the sins of nationalism, militarism, and the tyranny of a despotic minority. Unlike Spengler in his The Decline of the West, Toynbee did not regard the death of a civilization as inevitable, for it may or may not continue to respond to successive challenges. Unlike Karl Marx, he saw history as shaped by spiritual, not economic forces. SHALOM...
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Post by plutronus on Apr 2, 2020 2:36:30 GMT
Mr Yelm and SysConfig,
It is amazing to me and a bit odd to realize that Medicine CURED polio, typhoid, malaria, St Vitas Dance and host of other illnesses with 1800's technology, and yet, today in this, our vaunted post dark-ages high-technology era, there are NO CUREs for anything.
But wait, there are therapies, medical regimens, for almost every serious illness out there, but no cures. One example is the insidious immune system illness, multiple scelerosis or "MS". MS is a general, slowly progressive paralysis. It is a nasty illness. My beautiful lady of 40 years was diagnosed with MS in 1982. She still has it. When I met her, she was working at RocketDyne, in Space Shuttle Main Engine Quality Assurance. She was also a member of a professional dance troupe who were stage dancers in shows on weekends. Her favorite form of dance was, heh heh, belly dancing and she loved Greek dancing!! Being an Aries, she was a fire brand, super active, like a cigarette speed boat on a lake. She is now in a wheel chair. Her regimen, a tier 5 specialty medicine, before insurance, costs $6,650 per bottle of 30 pills, and after insurance, the copay is $370 per bottle per month. That medication cost in 2019 $82,000 per year. It is manufactured by our freinds in Israel. In fact many of the specialty medicines are manufacture in Israel. My lady has at one time or another has been proscripted all of the main MS medicines, which included, as they became available, Betaseron one shot per day, (worked the best, but users experienced a 67% suicide rate, so we dropped its usage) at $830/shot, Avonex, one shot per day/shot at $775 per shot, Copaxone 1 shot per week, $680/shot, and also recently available, 1 shot per week at $3300/shot.
I gave my lady all those shots for nearly 40 years. Now she's taking Aubagio. Nothing stops the progression of MS for her.
My point in all of this is that there are no cures in today's medical clime. But there are therapies, costing typically around $1200 per shot. In the 1800s they developed cures, today, therapies.
Hydrochloroquine (HCQ) isn't FDA approved, and therefore shouldn't be used, because Dr. Fucky, says that there is only "anecdotal" evidence that HCQ is effective in the treatment of CoVId19 virus. HCQ is an old medicine, it is almost an over the counter medicine and it is virtually free by comparison to the medical 'regimens' of today....maybe its because all of the pharmaceuticals are racing to develop that $2500 per shot x 300,000,000 users world wide therapy?
Lots of filthy rich pharma pigs out there.
plutronus
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Post by moksha on Apr 2, 2020 10:13:47 GMT
Arnold Toynbee, (born April 14, 1889, London—died Oct. 22, 1975, York, North Yorkshire, Eng.), English historian whose 12-volume A Study of History (1934–61) put forward a philosophy of history, based on an analysis of the cyclical development and decline of civilizations, that provoked much discussion.Toynbee began his Study of History in 1922, inspired by seeing Bulgarian peasants wearing fox-skin caps like those described by Herodotus as the headgear of Xerxes’ troops. This incident reveals the characteristics that give his work its special quality—his sense of the vast continuity of history and his eye for its pattern, his immense erudition, and his acute observation. In the Study Toynbee examined the rise and fall of 26 civilizations in the course of human history, and he concluded that they rose by responding successfully to challenges under the leadership of creative minorities composed of elite leaders. Civilizations declined when their leaders stopped responding creatively, and the civilizations then sank owing to the sins of nationalism, militarism, and the tyranny of a despotic minority. Unlike Spengler in his The Decline of the West, Toynbee did not regard the death of a civilization as inevitable, for it may or may not continue to respond to successive challenges. Unlike Karl Marx, he saw history as shaped by spiritual, not economic forces. SHALOM... This might sound strange, but, what if economic forces are spiritual forces? For 49 years, the Global monetary has been fiat, the number 49 is part of code, more on that in 7 days. It is predictable if what everybody needs to live is controlled by the landlord. Covid 1984 has pushed me to look at the code/prophesy
6+6+7=19
And Yes, Trump is part of the code, what happened in 1971? Not sure Lisa Simpson should be next, more on that later.
Report
Song # 84
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Post by swamprat on Apr 2, 2020 15:25:00 GMT
In case you need something to do while quarantined at home.....
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Post by swamprat on Apr 2, 2020 15:28:15 GMT
Today's winning Facebook post:
Reposted from another nurse. Wow, Powerful! We all can relate to at least some of this. Be safe my friends!
To the nurse who was fired for wearing their own mask.
To the nurse who has been told they’ll be written up for not adhering to hospital policy.
To the nurse who has been told they can trust policy because it’s based on, “CDC guidelines.”
To the nurse who has worked 4, 5, 6, 7 consecutive, 12 hour shifts.
To the nurse who is supposed to get married soon.
To the nurse who has a spouse also on the front lines.
To the nurse who was verbally assaulted on their way to work.
To the nurse who was physically assaulted by a patient when they got there.
To the nurse who hasn’t hugged or kissed their family in weeks.
To the nurse who has no childcare but must report to work.
To the nurse who is pregnant and feels guilty for not accepting COVID cases.
To the nurse who is immunocompromised, but can’t help but feel like she’s failing her coworkers.
To the nurse who watches some people on the outside defy social distancing recommendations.
To the nurse who now has skin breakdown from prolonged mask-use.
To the nurse who just graduated and is in their first year of nursing.
To the nurse who has been denied COVID- testing.
To the nurse who is a single parent and has had to send their kid away to live with relatives.
To the nurse who only sheds tears in the shower so that it can drain with the water.
To the nurse who has had no food or drink their entire shift.
To the nurse who is diabetic and now their glucose is low.
To the nurse who is skilled in operating the ventilators.
To the nurse who wonders what was the point of all those ethics papers back in nursing school.
To the nurse being bombarded by the media to make statements about their experience.
To the nurse who works on a unit that does not have pulse ox cords in some of the rooms.
To the nurse who was told they no longer need an N95, "per the CDC."
To the nurse who filled out their Advance Directive- Medical POA after a tough shift.
To the nurse who must find their voice and now use their patient advocacy skills, for themselves.
To the nurse on the floor who has been cancelled for the 3rd time, displaced, or redeployed.
To the nurse who knows deep down this is not just droplet + contact.
To the nurse who’s 25-year old abdominal pain patient was found to have ground-glass opacities on the CT.
To the nurse who realizes none of the team wore PPE, since abdominal pain was not part of the criteria.
To the nurse who is hiding their pre-existing condition for fear of retaliation, or coming up short for their coworkers.
To the nurse who was just handed their one mask and plastic bag for the day, for the week.
To the nurse who has been living out of a motel to avoid infecting their family.
To the nurse who is running out of sick leave and PTO.
To the nurse who found out their patient was COVID (+) via word of mouth, through the grape vine.
To the nurse who didn’t pack lunch today because their work schedule does not permit time to buy groceries.
To the nurse who stayed up last night sewing together pieces of fabric so that they’d have a mask.
To the nurse who wonders when that mysterious tent that was put up outside will be put into use.
To the nurse in charge who has received 3 CPRs, a stroke, and a trauma, back to back.
To the nurse who searches anxiously for a new mask; they’re locked up now.
To the nurse who is thinking about putting in their resignation.
To the nurse who wonders well what about the ANA Code of Ethics, you know, provisions 5 and 6?
To the nurse who has arrived at a shift with 8 call outs.
To the nurse who catches a glimpse of the freezer truck parked out back that is being used as morgue overflow.
To the nurse who stands alone in their PPE next to their intubated patient, as they silently have an anxiety attack.
To the nurse who just gave themselves a Cardi-B pep-talk so they can get back out there.
To the nurse who has been told to cohort the cancer patient with the suspected COVID patient, because there’s just no more space.
To the nurse who was told they signed up for this.
To the nurse who is active in the union and spends off days writing up Demands and Calls to Action.
To the nurse who just performed the last round of CPR on their 30-year old patient.
To the nurse who stepped outside to catch their breath but instead ended up pulling an unconscious man out of a car.
To the nurse who is on a travel assignment and nowhere close to their loved ones.
To the nurse who just risked their job by sounding the alarm and exposing their hospital.
To the nurse who knows there are no more ventilators left and their patient will die by morning.
To the nurse who just received a lab call notifying them that their COVID patient’s blood work has hemolyzed.
To the nurse who has been made to feel like their life does not matter.
To the nurse who realizes the public did not truly know what nurses, “do,” until now.
To the nurse who is being reassured by leadership shift after shift that PPE stockpiles exist... somewhere.
To the nurse who woke up to a text message that another one of their coworkers has died.
To the nurse who can feel their spirit breaking.
To the nurse who is not being offered mental health support.
To the nurse rushing to don their PPE as their patient de-sats.
To the nurse being told by higher ups during huddle to abandon all they’ve ever known to be true about appropriate infection control and safety precautions.
To the nurse who muttered under their breath, “yea, but I bet you wouldn’t go in there without an N95.”
To the nurse who just wrapped themselves in a trash bag before entering the room.
To the nurse who was abandoned by the same system they dedicated their life to.
To the nurse who woke up in the middle of the night with a fever and cough.
To the nurse who has tested positive for COVID-19.
To the nurse who can no longer breathe on their own.
To the nurse who has been admitted to the ICU.
To the nurse who was just intubated by their own colleague.
To the nurse who did chest compressions on this nurse with tears streaming down their face.
To the nurse who backs away for the last time, as time of death is called.
To the nurse who has been referred to as, “just a nurse.”
To the nurse who wonders if this is how they treat, “heroes.”
I am a Nurse.
To the nurses all around the world, I feel you.
I share your pain. I have your back.
You are me. I am you. We are each other.
Let’s show them our truth.
This post really explains why nurses, when they die, get wings. They are, after all, angels.
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Post by nyx on Apr 2, 2020 17:12:42 GMT
Mayor Michelle De La Isla of Topeka, Kansas is a good example of mayors in western and upper western states that are having when it come to the coronavirus.
Topeka has not been hit by COVID-19, and the town thinks the coronavirus is a bunch of garbage.
Most western states are not on board with what is happening in other parts of the country for example New York, City.
Welcome to the Wild West.
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Post by nyx on Apr 2, 2020 19:07:10 GMT
The talking heads on news TV are talking about the second coming, no, not anything to do with religion.
There is going to be a second out break of coronavirus around October and November.
I hope these people are wrong.
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