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Re: Fat Tubby Conspicuously Absent from Gen. Coleman Powell's Funeral

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Kurt Nicklas

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Nov 9, 2021, 4:43:55 PM11/9/21
to
ed...@post.com wrote

> I wonder why. Powell not right wing Commie enough for him? Or too black?
Or he just can't stand Biden's, Obama's and Bush's guts to be seated in the
same church with them? Or funerals bore him?
>

Trump's had it in for black people ever since he was raped by one as a boy
while his daddy watched.

Kurt Nicklas

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Nov 27, 2021, 6:24:11 PM11/27/21
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Kurt Nicklas

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Nov 28, 2021, 11:11:05 PM11/28/21
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Kurt Nicklas

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Dec 5, 2021, 10:37:52 AM12/5/21
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Kurt Nicklas

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Dec 6, 2021, 6:05:05 PM12/6/21
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Kurt Nicklas

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Jan 25, 2022, 6:16:26 PM1/25/22
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Kurt Nicklas

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Feb 11, 2022, 9:14:44 AM2/11/22
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Gregory P. Schermer

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Jan 15, 2023, 9:35:03 AM1/15/23
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In article <smeq2q$8cs$1...@news.dns-netz.com>
<governo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Democrats are responsible for this.
>

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FCg_rdHpS9w

Ramon F. Herrera

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Jan 15, 2023, 10:25:03 AM1/15/23
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In article <snuemq$r12$3...@news.dns-netz.com>
governo...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>
> I believe Biden is insane. Facts speak for themselves.
>

"Keep your rosaries, off my ovaries," the protesters could be
heard chanting in call and response fashion while police stood
on guard in front of Kavanaugh’s home.

26-year-old California man Nicholas John Roske was arrested
early Wednesday near Kavanaugh's house in Maryland after
threatening to kill the justice. Police said he was carrying a
gun, a knife and zip ties.

CNN REPORTER WARNS OF VIOLENCE FROM ‘BOTH SIDES’ AFTER ARMED MAN
ARRESTED OUTSIDE JUSTICE KAVANAUGH'S HOME

Later in the day federal prosecutors charged Roske with the
attempted murder of a Supreme Court Justice. During a court
hearing, he consented to remain in federal custody for now.

Roske told police he was upset by a leaked draft opinion
suggesting the Supreme Court is about to overrule Roe v. Wade,
the landmark abortion case. He also said he was upset over the
school massacre in Uvalde, Texas, and believed Kavanaugh would
vote to loosen gun control laws, the affidavit said.

Proof that liberals are stupid.

https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pro-choice-activists-protest-
kavanaugh-home-man-murder-attempt

But Trump!

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Jan 15, 2023, 10:35:03 AM1/15/23
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In article <su5r0j$16sir$1...@news.freedyn.de>
forging asshole <governo...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Gov. Gavin Newsom, D-Calif., misrepresented his wildfire preparedness and even disinvested in prevention.
>

LEE VINING, Mono County — The few who live along the shores of
Mono Lake are accustomed to the peculiarities of this high
desert basin.

Famously strange limestone spires known as tufa towers rise from
the water. The lake contains so much salt that it’s barren of
fish. In the arid sands beyond, sagebrush thrives, and that’s
about it.

But the alkali flats that are emerging from the lake’s surface,
ghost white, aren’t just another nod to the uniqueness of this
ancient place. They’re a sign of trouble. Amid a third year of
drought, the sprawling lake on the remote east side of the
Sierra Nevada is sharply receding, and the small towns and
wildlife so closely tied to the water are feeling the pinch.

Already, parts of the lake popular with kayakers, beachgoers and
tribal members have dried up. Fierce dust storms blow off the
exposed lake bottom and cloud the skies with some of the
nation’s worst air pollution. A land bridge is forming to
islands with tens of thousands of nesting gulls, threatening to
bring coyotes within easy reach of baby birds.

“It affects everybody, that lake — we all live around it,” said
Marianne Denny, a 40-year resident of the basin who says “the
white stuff,” indicative of the lake’s decline, is among the
most she’s ever seen. “Hopefully we’ll live to see more water.”

The drought bearing down on Mono Lake and the rest of California
picks up on a two-decade run of extreme warming and drying. It’s
a product of the changing climate that has begun to profoundly
reshape the landscape of the West and how people live within it.
From less alpine snow and emptying reservoirs to parched forests
and increased wildfire, the change is posing new, and often
difficult, challenges.

At Mono Lake, an emblem of the state’s wild and distinct beauty,
the reckoning has been a long time coming.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/52/27/22717930/3/1280x0.jpg>

For eight decades, the city of Los Angeles has piped water from
four creeks that feed the lake to its facilities 350 miles to
the south, sometimes diverting almost all of the inflow. It’s a
familiar California tale of old water rights yielding inordinate
benefit.

The concerns at the lake, though, were supposed to have been
resolved. In 1994, after a lengthy environmental campaign that
spurred “Save Mono Lake” bumper stickers on vehicles up and down
California, state water regulators put caps on L.A.’s exports.
Slowly, lake levels rose. But they did not rise as much as they
were supposed to.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722566/6/rawImage.jpg>

Drought, on top of a climate that’s changed faster than
expected, has slowed progress. On April 1, the typical start of
the lake’s runoff season, the water level measured 6,379.9 feet
above sea level, about 12 feet short of the state target. Before
Los Angeles began drawing water from the creeks here, the lake
was nearly 40 feet higher.

“A lot of Californians who know about Mono Lake think, thank
goodness, we got it on the success list,” said Geoff McQuilkin,
executive director of the nonprofit Mono Lake Committee, which
advocates for the basin. “The thing is we’ve given it 20 years,
now 28 years, and we’re still seeing the problems they thought
would be gone by now.”

McQuilkin and his staff run an information center and bookstore
out of an old dance hall in Lee Vining, the only community on
the lake with a gas station and grocery store. It’s about a five-
hour drive from San Francisco. Tourists on scenic Highway 395
can stop at the center and learn about the area.

If they spend some time, they’ll learn that many residents here
want the state to revisit its recovery plan for the lake — and
force Los Angeles to surrender more water.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722568/3/ratio3x2_1200
.jpg>
<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722572/3/ratio3x2_1200
.jpg>

On a recent morning, McQuilkin walked along the quiet north
shore of the 70-square-mile lake.

Above, the Sierra crest loomed, and below stood the wide expanse
of the unveiled lake bottom. It’s colored white from salt that
rises to the surface with groundwater.

Like its sister, the Great Salt Lake in Utah, Mono Lake is
brimming with salt — about 2½ times more so than the ocean —
because it has no outlet for drainage. Thousands of years of
evaporation have concentrated minerals in the lake and the
groundwater beneath it. The lake is believed to be at least
760,000 years old, and maybe a few million, making it one of the
oldest in North America.

“There’s just all these interesting things here,” McQuilkin
said. “Californians do not want to let this go.”

The tufa spires that lift from the shallow water are also a
result of the lake’s unusual water chemistry. They’ve formed
over centuries as carbonates in the lake mix with calcium from
underwater springs and coalesce as mineral deposits that look
like giant slabs of coral reef.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722569/3/1200x0.jpg>

Because of the unique environment, the lake’s inhabitants are
limited: mainly brine shrimp and hovering alkali flies. These
critters, though, provide food for as many as a million
migratory birds annually, including eared grebes and Wilson’s
and red-necked phalaropes.

McQuilkin is watching, in particular, the California gulls. He
wants to make sure they’re safe. In the summer, about a quarter
of this gull’s total population nests on the lake’s Negit
Islets, which are at risk of being invaded by predators because
of a land bridge emerging in the increasingly shallow water. The
birds already abandoned one of the main islands, Negit Island,
decades ago because it became connected to the mainland with
lower lake levels.

“There’s no question that coyotes can swim across that,”
McQuilkin said, looking at the channel between the current
islands and the north shore. “We’re just hoping they don’t.”

Five cameras that McQuilkin and his colleagues have set up
monitor for coyotes. The Mono Lake Committee keeps more than a
mile of electric fence on hand that employees plan to string out
if the wild canines begin to amass. So far, the cameras have
picked up just two passers-by.

The group debuted the temporary barrier during last decade’s
drought, when coyotes started making their way to the islands
and scouting for eggs and young birds.

This year, the group hopes the lake bottom will remain partially
submerged at least until next month, when most of the newborn
gulls will have hatched and be ready to fly off to places like
San Francisco Bay.

Next year is a different story. Even if the Sierra gets a lot of
snow come winter, melt-off into the lake won’t arrive until late
spring and summer, so lake levels will likely be even lower when
the gulls return. McQuilkin said the fence will almost certainly
go up then.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722567/6/1200x0.jpg>

At the home of Priscilla and Cole Hawkins, the exposed lake bed
on the north shore means dust, and sometimes lots of it.

Strong desert winds can pick up the mineral-laden soil and carry
it for miles.

“We call them dust devils,” said Priscilla, whose off-the-grid
property backs up to the lake and offers big vistas of the tall
peaks in Yosemite National Park, at least when the air is clear.

Cole bought the house with his wife two decades ago, moving in
full time a few years back. The dust is not a problem that
often, he said, but when it is, it can be severe, limiting
visibility to less than a quarter-mile. He compares the dust
storms to fog banks with debris.

“When it gets really bad, we go inside or head for the hills,”
he said, looking out at a blue sky on this particular afternoon.
“We’ve come back to the house and it’s almost like sand on the
curtains.”

The dust, which is tracked by the local air district under the
label PM10, or particulate matter that is 10 microns in diameter
or less, is a health issue, district officials say. The
particles can lodge deep in the lungs and cause tissue damage
and lung inflammation.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722570/3/1200x0.jpg>

In nine of the past 10 years, the Mono Lake area has had the
distinction of racking up more federal air quality violations
for PM10 than any other place in the nation, according to the
district. In 2016, during last decade’s drought, federal air
standards were breached on 33 days.

The past few years haven’t seen as many violations, according to
data from the Great Basin Unified Air Pollution Control
District. However, Phill Kiddoo, air pollution control officer
for the agency, says the trend line remains bad.

“Mono Lake probably has some of the best air quality in the
nation 90% of the days of the year, but on windy days, we have
some of the worst,” he said.

With less snow and less runoff in the Sierra to fill the lake in
recent years, Kiddoo, whose job it is to try to keep the skies
clean, believes it’s time for Los Angeles to further reduce its
draws from the basin.

“Every inch of lake-level rise that we can get protects air
quality,” he said.

The State Water Resources Control Board, which regulates water
draws, told The Chronicle that it is paying attention to the
lake, the basin and to the thirst that’s compromised them.

While acknowledging that the lake’s rise has stalled — lake
levels have generally hovered a little more than 10 feet below
the target for a decade — state officials credit water
restrictions for at least stabilizing things.

Owens Lake, about 150 miles to the south, was not so fortunate.
The lake was sucked dry by Southern California water diversions
almost a century ago and is nothing but salt flats today.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/52/27/22717928/3/1280x0.jpg>

The 1994 regulation at Mono Lake established caps on how much
Los Angeles can draw from the feeder creeks based on how high
the lake is. This year, the city’s diversions were limited to
4,500 acre-feet of water, about enough to supply 60,000
residents, according to the city. If the lake had been 3 feet
lower, no water could have been drawn.

Erik Ekdahl, a deputy director at the State Water Board, said
the changing climate, notably the “aridification” of the West,
has constrained lake levels more than regulators anticipated and
the agency will likely have to re-evaluate its regulation.

“We are at the point where we do want to start asking, ‘What are
the next steps?’ and ‘What’s the timeline for having a more
thorough discussion?’” he said.

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power insists that
whatever comes of future deliberations, more water restrictions
are not the answer.

In an email to The Chronicle, the department’s managing water
utility engineer, Paul Liu, said the city’s draws had a
negligible impact on the lake’s decline, compared to drought and
other climate factors.

The city, in recent years, has reduced diversions to about 12%
of the water in the creeks flowing to Mono Lake where it has
water rights, he said. Meanwhile, the city has spent tens of
millions of dollars to help restore the creeks and promote
healthy runoff. About 3% of the city’s total water comes from
these creeks, Liu said, a supply that is small but considered
vital.

“In a scenario where Mono basin exports to Los Angeles are
reduced or cut off completely, that shortfall will have to be
made up by increasing exports from the State Water Project or
the Colorado River, which are both extremely strained and
limited as well,” wrote Liu.

But Christine Garrison, like many who live in the area, says
something has to be done, and sooner rather than later.

<https://s.hdnux.com/photos/01/26/53/40/22722571/3/1200x0.jpg>

On a recent morning, the Mono County native pulled into the Old
Marina near Lee Vining, a spontaneous stop at the lake that took
her back to her youth. A descendant of the Mono Lake Paiute,
Garrison used to watch her grandmother walk the lakeshore and
collect the pupae of the alkali fly, a traditional protein-rich
delicacy called kutsavi.

Garrison put on her “irrigation boots” with the intention of
scooping up pupae, but then stopped. The waterline was too low
to proceed.

“I had to go so far out that I was afraid I’d get stuck in the
mud,” she said. “I could still smell (the kutsavi), though.”

She added: “When there’s no water in the lake, everything goes.”

Kurtis Alexander is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer.
Email: kalex...@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @kurtisalexander

https://www.sfchronicle.com/climate/article/mono-lake-drought-
17318513.php

Johnny America

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Jan 15, 2023, 2:05:03 PM1/15/23
to
In article <soimce$og$4...@news.dns-netz.com>
governo...@gmail.com wrote:
>

BULLSHIT! They can't afford housing because they spend all
their fucking money on drugs, alcohol and drug whores!

The government and do-gooders keep giving them food, clothes and
MORE MONEY!

What do they do with that money? They spend all the fucking
money on drugs, alcohol and drug whores!

SAN DIEGO — Ask just about anyone for their thoughts on what
causes homelessness, and you will likely hear drug addiction,
mental illness, alcoholism and poverty.

A pair of researchers, however, looked at those issues across
the country and found they occur everywhere. What does vary
greatly around the country, they found, was the availability of
affordable housing.

In their University of California Press book “Homelessness is a
Housing Problem,” authors Clayton Page Aldern and Gregg Colburn
looked at various contributing issues of homelessness, including
mental illness and addiction, and the per capita rate of
homelessness around the country. By looking at the rate of
homeless per 1,000 people, they found communities with the
highest housing costs had some of the highest rates of
homelessness, something that might be overlooked when looking at
just the overall raw number of homeless people.

As an example, the 2019 count of people in shelters and on the
street found a homeless population of 56,000 in Los Angeles
County; 11,200 in King County, Wash.; 9,700 in Santa Clara
County, Calif.; and 4,000 in Multnomah County, Ore. The homeless
populations became similar when looking at per capita rates,
with Los Angeles having six homeless people for every 1,000
residents and the other three, smaller counties having five
homeless people for every 1,000.

What they had in common was a lack of affordable housing.

San Diego County had about 2.5 homeless people for every 1,000
residents, which was about the average per capita rate in the
2019 count. Aldern pointed out that the San Diego number would
be greater if it included just the metropolitan area rather than
the entire county.

Aldern, a data scientist and policy analyst in Seattle, and
Colburn, an assistant professor of real estate at the University
of Washington’s College of Built Environments, said they are not
suggesting that mental illness, addictions and other issues are
not contributing factors to homelessness.

“That’s certainly not the point of the book,” Colburn said. “But
I firmly believe that we can’t treat our way out of this
problem. You could fix all the addiction in San Diego right now
and you’d still have a problem with homelessness because there
just aren’t places for people to go who have lower levels of
income.”

Lisa Jones, executive vice president of strategic initiatives at
the San Diego Housing Commission, said she has not read the book
but does see a connection between housing and homelessness.

“High-cost rental markets that far outstrip area median incomes
— and push renters into paying more than 50% of their income
toward rent — certainly are a significant contributing factor to
making households at high risk of experiencing homelessness,”
she wrote in an email.

“When households do experience homelessness, those factors make
it even harder for them to exit homelessness by renting in the
private rental market,” Jones continued. “We also know that the
longer a household experiences homelessness, the more likely
other key quality-of-life factors will be affected, such as
physical and mental well-being.

“We need to continue to strive to build a homelessness response
system that has a diverse spectrum of resources to meet a
household’s unique needs,” she concluded. “At the same time, we
need to continue to support the efforts of policy makers at
local, state and national levels to increase affordable housing
development and rental assistance opportunities, streamline
application processes, and reduce construction costs to increase
production.”

In San Diego, nonprofits and local government agencies have made
strides to create more housing. The city of San Diego purchased
two extended-stay hotels in 2020 to provide homes for 400
people, and earlier this year Father Joe’s Villages open St.
Teresa of Calcutta Villa to provide homes for 400 more people.

More permanent, affordable housing is planned throughout the
county, but the need remains great. The city of San Diego’s
Community Action Plan on Homelessness from 2019 called for
significant investment in permanent solutions rather than
shelters, with a recommendation to build 5,400 units, including
3,500 units of permanent supportive housing over 10 years.

The new projects would reverse a trend over the last decade that
showed San Diego losing thousands of units of low-income
housing, including 9,290 single-room occupancy hotels and 1,500
low-income rental units that were converted to condominiums,
according to a 2016 article in the San Diego Union-Tribune.

Colburn said he was motivated to research the subject after
attending meetings with political and civic leaders in Seattle
and feeling they did not grasp the true cause of homelessness,
which resulted in responses he called scattershot.

“One day we were talking about drugs, and one day we were
talking about rent, and one day we were talking about mental
health, and one day we were talking about poverty, and I thought
that was counterproductive,” he said.

Colburn said it is true that people who are poor, addicted or
mentally ill are more likely to experience homelessness, but a
disproportionate number of people with those conditions is not
the cause of higher rates of homelessness in some areas.

“We’re not trying to dispute that these individual
vulnerabilities matter,” he said. “They certainly do. But the
point is, there are people who are addicted and mentally ill in
Chicago, and Chicago has one-fifth the homelessness of Seattle
and San Francisco. So what’s going on here? The point is these
individual vulnerabilities interact with housing markets to
produce homelessness.”

The researchers looked at homelessness in West Virginia and
Arkansas, which were hit hard by the opioid epidemic, and found
the homeless rate was low. Housing prices in those states also
are lower than in many cities with higher homeless rates,
Colburn said.

Poverty also is a contributing factor of homelessness, but the
researchers found areas with high poverty rates don’t
necessarily have high homelessness rates if housing costs are
lower. As an example, Colburn said Detroit is one of the most
impoverished cities in the country, but it has one-fifth the
homelessness of West Coast cities on a per capita basis.

“The point is, if you are poor, if you are addicted, if you are
mentally ill in an expensive West Coast city like San Diego,
you’re far more likely to experience homelessness,” he said.
“And that issue explains why Seattle, Portland, San Francisco,
Los Angeles and San Diego have much, much higher rates of
homelessness than Miami, or Dallas, or Phoenix, for example.”

Colburn said he and Aldern studied data from the U.S. Census
Bureau and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
to understand population growth, incomes, rates of poverty,
mobility, mental health and addictions in different areas.

“Pretty soon it became very clear that rental costs and vacancy
rates were by far the biggest predictor of rates of homelessness
in a community,” Colburn said. “It’s not the only factor. There
are all sorts of complicated phenomenon, but it’s a far more
convincing phenomenon than anything else.”

Colburn said they also attempted to dispel what they said are
myths about homelessness, such as that it is higher in cities
with Democratic mayors. In reality, most major cities have
Democrats as mayor, but that also includes cities such as
Detroit with smaller homeless populations, he said.

They also looked at the claim that homeless people move to areas
with greater public assistance, something they judged by
comparing the state variations in the federal Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families program. They found that states
that provided more dollars in the program did not have higher
rates of homelessness.

The researchers also cited studies on mobility that found people
with low incomes are less likely to move to another area because
moving is difficult and expensive.

“The fundamental point is, if we correctly diagnosed this
problem as a structural problem, which I think it is, then we
need structural solutions,” Colburn said. “We need a significant
commitment at all levels of government and the private sector to
ensure we have an adequate supply of housing that’s affordable
to people. And if we don’t do that, I’m highly, highly confident
that we will not put a dent in this problem of homelessness.”

Colburn said housing must be a part of the conversation when
addressing homelessness, and that conversation can be
discouraging because it will take years and be a costly
investment to create enough affordable housing to make a
difference.

“It’s not like just flipping a light switch,” he said. “That’s
why a lot of times this is a scary message to people, because it
suggests we’ve got a long battle ahead of us.”

https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2022-07-11/new-book-
links-homelessness-city-prosperity

Fist Bumps Are FAG Gestures

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Jan 15, 2023, 3:50:03 PM1/15/23
to
In article <so1jsn$du4$9...@news.dns-netz.com>
governo...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> I believe Biden is insane. Facts speak for themselves.
>

President Joe Biden’s trip to the Middle East came to an end
with yet more controversy after it emerged that an American
lawyer who previously represented Jamal Khashoggi had been
detained in the UAE.

US citizen Asim Ghafoor was detained at Dubai airport on
Thursday while travelling to Istanbul for a family wedding and
is now being held in a detention facility on charges related to
an in absentia conviction for money laundering. Mr Ghafoor had
no prior knowledge of any conviction, a human rights group said.

On Saturday, Mr Biden met with UAE President Sheik Mohammed bin
Zayed Al Nahyan and invited him to come to the US for a visit
before the year is out.

The UAE president was one of multiple Middle Eastern leaders Mr
Biden met in Saudi Arabia on Saturday before leaving aboard Air
Force One.

New details also emerged about Friday’s controversial meeting
with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman – the man US
intelligence found responsible for ordering the murder of
journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

When Mr Biden confronted MBS about the killing – after a
friendly fist-bump – he denied the accusation and fired back
about the US’s own controversies.

Saudis don't like faggots.

Biden promotes faggots.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-
politics/biden-today-saudi-arabia-prince-mbs-b2124737.html

There Was No Holocaust

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Jan 15, 2023, 5:05:03 PM1/15/23
to
In article <som4p8$c0f$3...@news.dns-netz.com>
Abwehr <abw...@abwehr.de> wrote:
>
> Jews are criminals.

A Seattle suburb has reached a $1.5 million agreement with a
former assistant police chief who was suspended for posting Nazi
insignia on his office door, The Seattle Times reported on
Friday.

In September 2020, former Kent Assistant Chief Derek Kammerzell
was suspended for two weeks without pay for the violation, which
also included making fun of the Holocaust, per The Times.

KIRO7, a CBS TV affiliate in Seattle, reported that the city
said Kammerzell's two-week suspension was "appropriate based on
the facts and after considering the assistant chief's 27 years
of performance without discipline, the lack of any allegations
of excessive force during his career, and a record with no known
complaints from the community."

However, members of the community were outraged and Mayor Dana
Ralph demanded Kammerzell step down.

Kammerzell was placed on administrative leave in December 2021.
Since he was already disciplined, Arthur Fitzpatrick, who is the
interim city chief administrative officer and also the city's
attorney, said the discipline would come at a high cost to the
city, per The Times.

Kammerzell initially had demanded $3.1 million for his
resignation but after months of negotiations, he and the city
reached an agreement of $1.52 million.

"While this is a substantial sum, we strongly believe that
settling this matter will be a substantial step towards meeting
our commitment to the community and continuing with the
excellent work the police department is doing," the city said,
according to KIRO7

The Seattle Times reported that even if Kammerzell was initially
fired, he would have been able to win his job back and get back
pay.

"Had the city terminated the assistant chief, it is confident it
would have been in no better position than it is now,"
Fitzpatrick said.

https://news.yahoo.com/seattle-suburb-paid-former-assistant-
172844571.html

Margaret R. Liberman

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Jan 15, 2023, 10:30:02 PM1/15/23
to
In article <som4p8$c0f$3...@news.dns-netz.com>
J D Young <jdyo...@ymail.com> wrote:
>
> On 30 Oct 2022, Klaus Schadenfreude
> <klaus.schadenfreude.entfernen.@gmail.com> posted some
> news:915tlhtk9qpa098jf...@4ax.com:
>
> > On Sun, 30 Oct 2022 08:10:13 -0700 (PDT), bigdog
> ><geowri...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> >>This one paragraph says it all:
> >>
> >>"Additionally, Fetterman got a boost from Biden and Vice President
> >>Harris, who made a rare joint visit to Philadelphia on Friday to
> >>campaign for the Democratic Senate candidate. Biden is slated to
> >>return with former President Obama to campaign for Fetterman on Nov.
> >>5."
> >>
> >>If you need Joe and Kamala to rescue you, then you are in deep shit.
> >>That's like having Gilligan and the Skipper arriving in the Minnow to
> >>rescue the Titanic.
> >
> > Will he let Biden use his closed-captioning TV screens?
> >
> > “I do support fracking and I don’t, I don’t — I support fracking, and
> > I stand, and I do support fracking.”
> > -Confused Fetterman
> >
> > You're hootin' at the wrong owl, you nursery-rhymin' can o' beans.
> > -Joe Biden
>
> Nobody messes with a Biden!

That shit story only has a few pages left before the book gets
burned and the Bidens with it.

Margaret R. Liberman

unread,
Jan 16, 2023, 2:55:03 AM1/16/23
to
In article <ssq0c9$ltma$1...@news.freedyn.de>
J D Young <jdyo...@ymail.com> wrote:
>
> On 30 Oct 2022, Klaus Schadenfreude
> <klaus.schadenfreude.entfernen.@gmail.com> posted some
> news:95ktlhd2ma377b6qt...@4ax.com:
>
> > On Sun, 30 Oct 2022 13:28:25 -0600, Hisler <his...@nym.hush.com>
> > wrote:
> >
> >>On 10/30/2022 12:37 PM, Klaus Schadenfreude wrote:
> >>> On Sun, 30 Oct 2022 12:23:53 -0600, Hisler <his...@nym.hush.com>
> >>> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> On 10/30/2022 4:40 AM, Klaus Schadenfreude wrote:
> >>>>> On Sat, 29 Oct 2022 19:25:22 -0600, Hisler <his...@nym.hush.com>
> >>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> On 10/29/2022 4:59 PM, Klaus Schadenfreude wrote:
> >>>>>>>>> That's not going to hurt Ukraine. It's going to hurt millions
> >>>>>>>>> of hungry Africans and Asians and billions of consumers who'll
> >>>>>>>>> pay more for groceries <snip>
> >>>>>>>> Wait until the hundreds of millions of refugees pour into
> >>>>>>>> Europe, fleeing starvation, poverty and chaos.
> >>>>>>> Are you kidding? Russians will stay right where they are.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I was referring to the hungry Africans and Asians.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> They're already poor.
> >>>>
> >>>> Now they're hungry as well.
> >>>
> >>> Russia will give in. It needs the money.
> >>
> >>Putin initially was indoctrinated into the belief of the Soviet Union
> >>(KGB) and with that the game is played to win without any morals. The
> >>no morals is great because he used it to get rich and made dangerous
> >>enemies, whom he mostly dispatched -- killed, escaped to other
> >>countries etc -- meanwhile each year they keep increasing. He is
> >>panicked that the people will eventually see that living a more free
> >>life, like NATO countries, will mean his demise and arrest him for his
> >>crimes.
> >>
> >>He's in PERSONAL survivor mode at this point. All ideologies are long
> >>gone. He doesn't want to be killed.
> >
> > He will be. His own people will do it if he doesn't, and he's too much
> > of a coward.
>
> When will Americans wise up and start killing Democrats?
>
> The rot in the USA begins at the top of the Democrat party.

The top is already rotten and dead. The real pieces of
festering shit are child molester faux rape victim Gretchen
Whitmer, Gavin Newsom, Mark Zuckerberg, Libby Schaaf, Jane
Castor, Kate Brown, Lori Lightfoot, Kathy Hochul, Vi Lyles and
Stacey Abrams.

Add those to your cull lists.

Margaret R. Liberman

unread,
Jan 16, 2023, 3:25:03 PM1/16/23
to
In article <so1jsn$du4$9...@news.dns-netz.com>
J D Young <jdyo...@ymail.com> wrote:
>
> On 30 Oct 2022, Klaus Schadenfreude
> <klaus.schadenfreude.entfernen.@gmail.com> posted some
> news:kvgtlhhr1c13qqoij...@4ax.com:
>
> > On Sun, 30 Oct 2022 18:15:24 +0000, Mitchell Holman
> ><noe...@verizon.net> wrote:
> >
> >>David Hartung <da...@Hotmail.com> wrote in
> >>news:rc2cnUDAfs-LMsP-...@giganews.com:
> >>
> >>> On 10/30/22 10:28, Klaus Schadenfreude wrote:
> >>>> https://www.nj.com/opinion/2022/10/new-jersey-democrats-are-under-
> the-
> >>>> gun-on-the-second-amendment-mulshine.html
> >>>>
> >>>> Durr, who occupies the seat that he won from then-Senate President
> >>>> Steve Sweeney last year in the most shocking upset in recent history,
> >>>> gave what is to many legislators a shocking view of the right to keep
> >>>> and bear arms. He argued citizens should have the same rights as
> >>>> police in that regard.
> >>>>
> >>>> “I fully support law enforcement 100 percent, but I do not believe
> >>>> they should have preferential treatment that would make any other
> >>>> citizens second-class citizens,�€? Durr told me when I phoned him
> >>>> Friday.
> >>>>
> >>>> When the government keeps the citizens from having the same rights as
> >>>> the police, he said, “It’s their way of control. They want people
> >>>> to need government for everything, including self-protection.�€?
> >>>>
> >>>> The news had just broken of the attack on House Speaker Nancy
> >>>> Pelosi’s husband by a lunatic with a hammer.
> >>>>
> >>>> “This is a prime example of why you need firearms for
> >>>> self-protection,�€? said Durr. “You can be attacked anywhere.�€?
> >>>>
> >>>> The man is, of course, 100% correct.
> >>>
> >>> Absolutely!
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >>
> >>If carrying a gun is such good
> >>protection why do police need
> >>bulletproof vests?
> >>
> >>
> > Why do they need AR-15's?
>
> Here in Miami we teach cops how to shoot so they only need AR-15 rifles
> when they want to intimidate the federal government or rogue corporations
> like the Disney pedophiles.

In Iowa we use them to control the nigger population.

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