Generational theory, international history and current events
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by aedens » Fri Jun 19, 2026 1:39 pm
by tim » Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:47 am
Gabbard Drops Fauci Covid-19 Receipts On Last Day: He Funded The Research, Cooked The Cover Story, Then Lied To Congress
According to a statement released with the files, "Fauci worked with politicized career leadership in the Intelligence Community (IC) to suppress the truth about his actions, the virus’ lab-leak origins, and his role in directing U.S. funding for this dangerous research that caused immeasurable harm and countless lost lives. These documents expose Fauci’s direct role in influencing and manipulating IC assessments on COVID-19, and how Fauci lied to Congress in 2024, when under oath he denied knowledge of or participation in discussions with intelligence officials about viral research."
by tim » Fri Jun 19, 2026 8:30 am
by Higgenbotham » Fri Jun 19, 2026 3:29 am
Higgenbotham wrote: Sat Jun 13, 2026 3:24 pm Sure, it would be to the Iranian's advantage at this time (in the current new dark age environment) to go ahead and open the Strait of Hormuz, then close it again when the US is unprepared and least expects it. Generally, it would be to their advantage to say, yeah, yeah, we'll go ahead with an agreement, then drag their feet over minor negotiating points, maybe sign an agreement, then renege on it when it's convenient for them to do so...as the new dark age tightens its grip.
by aedens » Thu Jun 18, 2026 6:23 pm
by Higgenbotham » Thu Jun 18, 2026 12:21 am
Higgenbotham wrote: Thu Jun 11, 2026 3:50 pm Second, Trump wants to tell you that because he is getting rid of a few illegals that he is tackling the immigration problem. The real immigration problem is the subject of the videos this youtuber is putting out. That's why this particular one has 3 million views and over 40,000 comments. As Europe burns as was noted yesterday. The comments are spot on and truthful. Third, the reason people voted for Trump is because he promised to solve the immigration problem. Since he has taken office, the problem has grown by leaps and bounds. This was entirely predictable. Fourth, since Trump has failed to solve the immigration problem, as was entirely predictable, people will now start to look for alternative solutions. Without doing a full blown analysis of the population in that area, I would venture to say that choosing Frisco as a location for replacement of the native population is problematic because it can easily be a target for a domestic insurgency, as it is on the far north edge of the Dallas Metroplex and butts up against rural areas full of ex military, hunters, preppers, etc. viewtopic.php?p=94397#p94397
‘END IT NOW’: MAGA Demands Trump End Visa Program That Takes Jobs From Americans Elizabeth Troutman Mitchell June 14, 2026 The MAGA movement is demanding that the Trump administration finally end a visa program that incentivizes employers to hire foreign students. The Optional Practical Training program, created in 1992, allows foreign students to remain in the United States to work for nearly four years after graduation. Employers receive a tax break for hiring foreign graduates under the program, which some say gives foreign nationals an advantage over U.S. citizens. “F” student visa holders, including OPT graduates, are considered nonresident aliens for their first five calendar years in America. For those years, their wages are exempt from Social Security and Medicare taxes—for both the employee and the employer. While the Department of Homeland Security has the authority to end the program by issuing a new rule, President Donald Trump’s administration has not publicly begun the rulemaking process, leading some conservative members of Congress to propose their own bills to end the program. Immigration hawks have supported the administration’s tough border policies but believe the OPT program should be a major priority as well.
by aedens » Wed Jun 17, 2026 11:19 pm
by Higgenbotham » Wed Jun 17, 2026 6:19 pm
by Higgenbotham » Wed Jun 17, 2026 5:29 pm
Higgenbotham wrote: Wed Jun 17, 2026 4:52 pm Vis-a-vis the Presidents of the past 50 years, this was stated in language that is almost unrecognizable. An old friend born in 1915 used to say the Presidents of this century were not, in his words, "Presidential timber".
Higgenbotham wrote: Thu May 24, 2012 10:13 pm But I also think we have a larger problem here. In my opinion, Barack Obama is no George Washington, he is no Abraham Lincoln, and he is no Franklin Delano Roosevelt. An old man from the hero generation told me, "This man is not presidential timber."
by Higgenbotham » Wed Jun 17, 2026 5:08 pm
Inventor and entrepreneur George Eastman founded the Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, New York, in 1888. Over the next century, the word Kodak — which George Eastman made up — essentially became synonymous with the act of taking pictures. It democratized photography with the affordable Brownie camera in 1900, then revolutionized it again in 1935 with Kodachrome, one of the first commercially successful color films. In 1975, a Kodak engineer invented the first digital camera — and by the end of that decade, the company was making billions of dollars per year. But throughout much of the 20th century, Kodak was also, for all intents and purposes, a U.S. military contractor. Alongside its subsidiary Eastman Chemical, Kodak produced warplane lacquer, gas mask parts, and refined uranium for the Manhattan Project.
“A company like Kodak, which we think of as this company that pioneered the snapshot that lives in this cultural realm, is deeply embedded in changing the substance of our world,” Lovejoy told Grist. That has had a profound impact on the environment and on frontline communities. But to most of the world, it’s still just the company that makes cameras. In her book, Lovejoy recounts the story of a Kodak representative telling people impacted by a methylene chloride spill, “We’ve never been thought of as a chemical company … we just made the yellow boxes.” That, Lovejoy said, might be the company’s public image, but it was never the truth. “Internally, they identified themselves as a chemical company,” she said. And for Lovejoy, “the environment and the military can’t be separated.” “The history of this material comes through poison gas, and it comes through the atomic bomb, and it comes through all of these materials that are really part of the history of the 20th and now 21st century.” Household names like DuPont, General Electric, and Exxon are among those that have similarly left the land, the water, and the air in the communities around them polluted — often while also serving as contractors for entities such as the Department of Defense. All have kept their environmental and social harms (and military ties) largely out of public view until decades after the fact, when they’re sometimes forced to pay for remediation.
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