Forwarded from The Real Martinez
Davis: "I'm third position on econ"
Also Davis: "National Socialism and National Bolshevism are indistinguishable"
Affixing "third" in front of your position that you admit is indistinguishable from Bolshevism does not change the fact that it's Bolshevism big guy.
Nice try though.
Also Davis: "National Socialism and National Bolshevism are indistinguishable"
Affixing "third" in front of your position that you admit is indistinguishable from Bolshevism does not change the fact that it's Bolshevism big guy.
Nice try though.
π³6
Former Australian MP and president of the Australian Medical Association says she and her lesbian wife are both dying from the vaccine:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11556473/Kerryn-Phelps-Jackie-Strickie-Phelps-Doctor-reveals-wife-suffered-Pfizer-vaccine-injuries.html
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11556473/Kerryn-Phelps-Jackie-Strickie-Phelps-Doctor-reveals-wife-suffered-Pfizer-vaccine-injuries.html
Mail Online
Top doctor reveals both she AND her wife suffered 'devastating' Covid vaccine injuries - and slams 'censorship of public discussion'β¦
Former federal MP and head of the AMA Dr Kerryn Phelps says both she and her wife have suffered vaccine injuries, which she believes are far more common than medical authorities will admit.
π³8
"I was rapidly reminded that I had written an article, published in the Daily Mail in the middle of 2021, which encouraged people to get vaccinated, particularly younger people. This was a very thorough article, written under my name but essentially conducted by interview, for the purpose of condoning the vaccine rollout at the time. Although I had started to have concerns, the overwhelming push by the Government and the medical community was that this would be in everyoneβs best interest. "So the environment at that time was completely different to what it is now. Indeed, my own take on this was soon to change very dramatically when my own son developed myocarditis after having a jab he did not want but that he needed for work and travel purposes."
China changes how it counts death from a respiratory disease to only include people who had respiratory symptoms and lung damage and now nobody is dying of "COVID".
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-64044204
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-64044204
Forwarded from The Paranormies Present (πReinhardtποΈ)
Telegram
The Paranormies Present
THE PARANORMIES PRESENT: THE NATIONALIST ENQUIRER 12/20/22!
PILLED LIVESTREAM, DONATIONS, SUBSCRIPTIONS HERE π
Also find us on:
ODYSEE and DLIVE
Join us EVERY Tuesday at 7:30 PM CST/8:30 EST for your weekly dose of news and conspiracy events. All withβ¦
PILLED LIVESTREAM, DONATIONS, SUBSCRIPTIONS HERE π
Also find us on:
ODYSEE and DLIVE
Join us EVERY Tuesday at 7:30 PM CST/8:30 EST for your weekly dose of news and conspiracy events. All withβ¦
people who took safe and effective are beginning to find out the other vaccines they took are no longer effective either
π³7
excited for the tony hovater arc where he actually goes schizophrenic after a full year of pretending to be one as a bad joke nobody reads
π³6
imagine being the cop who gets called in to the skyline chili tony hovater is having a nervous breakdown in and he just looks up at you from the model of the world trade center he's made out of spaghetti with his Aquino eyebrows twitching furiously and then he shouts out "DO U SEE?!?!?" while crashing a hotdog into it
π³9
Going to admit I was wrong about something: I'd predicted before the invasion began that Russia would annex Ukraine by end of year. That obviously seems t be an impossibility now. Here's a few reasons I was wrong.
1) I significantly overestimated Russia's armaments. I had no expectation of Russia sending soldiers to the front armed with Mosin-Nagants, which we've all seen pictures of. I was expecting Russia to roll out Ratnik-3/Sotnik armor, mini and micro UAVs, etc, instead they brought the Moist Nugget. What was a good rifle in 1891 obviously is a bit out of date in 2022.
2) I didn't expect Ukraine to be able to enact an effective air denial strategy. Traditional analysis suggested that the defender is at a disadvantage is a battle for air superiority, once you start getting bombed it's difficult to take control of the air. However Ukraine has been able to utilize comparatively cheap air defense systems to freeze out Russia's air force from most of the conflict, and enable the Ukranian counter-offensives. This suggests a new pivot in air warfare where the defender is now at an advantage (given modern defense systems).
3) Putin is obviously dealing with some health issues, which wasn't apparent before the war. While he isn't the architect of the war, he is an executor of it. Given Russia's military reliance on every action being confirmed from above in the chain of command, his deteriorating physical condition has almost certainly robbed the Russian military of much agility, particularly in the latter half of this war.
4) Dugin wasn't able to find his car and rather than be a rallying cry, basically nobody besides TRS/NJP staffers cared.
5) Russia has tried to apply economic pressures, but it hasn't been near enough. As we started heading into winter I've watched gas prices drop $2 a gallon. Still stupid high, but people will pay it.
1) I significantly overestimated Russia's armaments. I had no expectation of Russia sending soldiers to the front armed with Mosin-Nagants, which we've all seen pictures of. I was expecting Russia to roll out Ratnik-3/Sotnik armor, mini and micro UAVs, etc, instead they brought the Moist Nugget. What was a good rifle in 1891 obviously is a bit out of date in 2022.
2) I didn't expect Ukraine to be able to enact an effective air denial strategy. Traditional analysis suggested that the defender is at a disadvantage is a battle for air superiority, once you start getting bombed it's difficult to take control of the air. However Ukraine has been able to utilize comparatively cheap air defense systems to freeze out Russia's air force from most of the conflict, and enable the Ukranian counter-offensives. This suggests a new pivot in air warfare where the defender is now at an advantage (given modern defense systems).
3) Putin is obviously dealing with some health issues, which wasn't apparent before the war. While he isn't the architect of the war, he is an executor of it. Given Russia's military reliance on every action being confirmed from above in the chain of command, his deteriorating physical condition has almost certainly robbed the Russian military of much agility, particularly in the latter half of this war.
4) Dugin wasn't able to find his car and rather than be a rallying cry, basically nobody besides TRS/NJP staffers cared.
5) Russia has tried to apply economic pressures, but it hasn't been near enough. As we started heading into winter I've watched gas prices drop $2 a gallon. Still stupid high, but people will pay it.
π³7
I now expect an expensive, extended stalemate, which interestingly enough is likely the best outcome for nationalists in both the west and in Russia.
π³6
I got into an argument with one of the Dimond brothers the other day and they accused me of having "pictures of women immodestly dressed - a grave matter" on my channel. I went back through several months of posts and the only picture I could find remotely close to that was a picture from when Anna Khachiyan decided to go as 7homas777 for Halloween. I understand he has atrocious takes but that doesn't make it a mortal sin to wear his clothes as a costume.
π³6
The most rabidly zealous pro-vaxxers have pivoted entirely from "get the vaccine or die" to "lol I took the vaccine and didn't die" and fail 100% at recognizing the irony.
π³12
Had a nice time at Mass tonight. Grateful to have time to spend with God and remember all He has done for us.
π³12