The Colonel’s Corner🦅🦅🦅 – Telegram
The Colonel’s Corner🦅🦅🦅
1.74K subscribers
11.1K photos
4.05K videos
54 files
11.1K links
America is the only place on earth founded and dedicated on the principles laid out by God. We are under attack because of it. We will win. We must put on the armor of God every day and fight his battles.
Download Telegram
Forwarded from ✞ Dr C ✞ (IET 17 ⭐️⭐️⭐️)
Forwarded from ✞ Dr C ✞ (IET 17 ⭐️⭐️⭐️)
I’m old enough to remember when at the very beginning of COVID , massive food production warehouses had all of their employees catch COVID at the same time.

What if they’re doing this for two reasons
1) shutting down (their) food poisoning industry

While at the same time

2) creating the necessary food shortage Bc you can’t tell em you gotta show em - precipice
Forwarded from Tracy Beanz (Tracy Beanz)
Ummm what’s a non standard machine gun?

• Laser-guided rocket systems;
• Switchblade Tactical Unmanned Aerial Systems;
• Puma Unmanned Aerial Systems;
• Counter-Unmanned Aerial Systems;
• Armored High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicles;
• Small-to-large caliber nonstandard ammunition;
• Night vision devices, thermal imagery systems, and optics;
• Tactical secure communications systems;
• Non-standard machine guns;
• Commercial satellite imagery services;
• Medical supplies, field equipment, and spare parts.

Pentagon announces additional $300 million in aid to Ukraine.

● The Biden administration has now provided more than $2.3 Billion to Ukraine amid Russian invasion

Follow me
https://news.1rj.ru/str/Emerald_Robinson
There is a photo going around that people are claiming is of naked Joe Biden, taken from Hunter's Biden laptop.

David Nino posted it today, for instance.

Fact check: FALSE

This is a years old video taken from a porn site that had been selectively screenshotted to look like Joe, it's not. Nor is it from Hunter's laptop. Just a gross piece of disinformation that some idiots put onto the internet.
Forwarded from Jordan Sather
Is our food supply chain being screwed with even more than we're seeing on the public surface?

All these stories happening to distribution centers, food plants, and big box stores within the span of a month or two does not seem natural.

https://news.1rj.ru/str/thuletide/2685
In the corner of “did you know”?

I’m sure this hasn’t affected gas prices AT ALL….

The 2015 Paris agreement, initially ratified by all EU member states as a way of bringing it into force, marked a watershed moment. It was the first time that nations had agreed to introduce legal accountability for climate change and has since been signed by over 190 countries. In 2021, Shell was the first company to become subject to a legal ruling that it must reduce its emissions by 45% by 2030 under the terms of the agreement. The firm is appealing the decision, but the case could prove to be an important precedent, and it seems likely that other NGOs will follow suit. Courtesy of WEF website.
Global extortion that we pay for:

Evolving the ESG agenda from the boardroom
This shift is playing out in two key ways. Firstly, sustainability has become a matter of access to capital. High-carbon businesses are finding it increasingly tough to fund business-as-usual investment. On the flip side, there’s a tidal wave of funding flowing into the energy transition and the growth of green businesses. In the first half of 2021 alone, green tech startups raised €7 billion, compared to €4.7 billion in all of 2020. Similarly, investment in ESG-related assets continued to set new records in 2021, on a trajectory to hit $50 trillion by 2025. Courtesy of WEF
Translation: We, at the WEF, want to destroy everything.

A broader focus moving forward
So far, the climate has consumed a substantial share of the ESG conversation, but we can expect a broader focus moving forward. The accelerated net zero pathway, Europe’s new mission to eliminate dependence on Russian oil and gas, and a looming food crisis mean there will be pushes for more disclosures. Biodiversity, water consumption, and plastics could all become areas of focus.
Translation: never let a crisis go to waste.

Picking up the pace of the ESG movement
Back in 2020, it was already evident that the pandemic was creating a shift in mindset, generating a global sense of solidarity around issues like climate change. At that point, it wasn’t clear if the momentum around the conversation would translate into concrete action. However, at this point, it’s evident that, if anything, the ESG movement is picking up pace. We cannot risk complacency while there’s still an overwhelming amount of work to be done, but currently, there are plenty of signs that firms are willing and able to rise to the challenge.

Yes, courtesy of the WEF.
Did you know that the WEF created a Manifesto? Yea, like the communists/Marxists. I’m sure that’s a coincidence. Dated 2010. This is the opening:

“Until one is committed, there is hesitancy, the chance to draw back, always ineffective, concerning all acts of initiative (and creation). There is one elementary truth the ignorance of which kills countless ideas and splendid plans: that the moment one definitely commits oneself, then providence moves too. All sorts of things occur to help one that would never otherwise have occurred. A whole stream of events issues from the decision, raising in one’s favour all manner of unforeseen incidents and meetings and material assistance which no man could have dreamed would have come his way. Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Begin it now.”
Goethe

And begin it, they did. It’s that BOLDNESS that makes the difference. Just 👀 at DeSantis. Almost like he’s using their playbook. Uuummm Can you say Trump?
Vladimir Bukovsky wrote a book with documents he smuggled out of Russia right after communism ended. Random House was more worried about twisting the authors words into a leftist bent, they say on a treasure trove of information about the former Soviet Union and their atrocities. What are publishers role in a republic? It sure as hell isn’t truth.

According to wiki: The book was translated into several languages[73] but did not appear in English for over twenty years. Random House bought the rights to the manunoscript, but the publisher, in Bukovsky's words, tried to make the author "rewrite the whole book from the liberal left political perspective." Bukovsky resisted, explaining to the Random House editor that he was "allergic to political censorship" because of "certain peculiarities of my biography". (The contract was subsequently cancelled.).[74]
Meanwhile, the book was published in French as Jugement à Moscou (1995),[75] in Russian (1996) and in certain other Slavic languages: for a time the Polish edition became a best-seller.[74][76] In 2016, it was published in Italian, by Spirali, with the noscript Gli archivi segreti di Mosca. An English language translation did not appear in book form until May 2019, five months before the author died.[77]
Hhhmmm this sounds familiar. In the 1960s and 1970s, the Soviet authorities began the widespread use of psychiatric treatment as a form of punishment and deterrence for the independent-minded. This involved unlimited detention in a psikhushka, as such places were popularly known, which might be conventional psychiatric hospitals or psychiatric prison-hospitals set up (e.g. the Leningrad Special Psychiatric Hospital) as part of an existing penal institution. Healthy individuals were held among mentally ill and often dangerous patients; they were forced to take various psychotropic drugs; they might also be incarcerated in prison-type institutions under overall control of the KGB.[c 2]
Apparently CBS was a news org at some point in the distant past.

CBS interviews BuKovsky: That interview along with interviews with Andrei Amalrik and Pyotr Yakir were smuggled out of the country by Canadian diplomats and aired in 1970 in the CBS News special report "Voices from the Soviet Underground."[29][30] In 1971, Bukovsky managed to smuggle to the West over 150 pages further documenting the political abuse of psychiatric institutions in the Soviet Union. In a letter addressed to "Western psychiatrists" and written in a deliberately restrained tone, Bukovsky asked them to consider if the evidence justified the isolation of several dissidents, and urged them to discuss the matter at the next International Congress of Psychiatrists.[15]: 138–141 [31][32]: 29–30 
Speaking of CBS: In the WEF manifesto in 1977 there’s this nuggets under the “Davos Club”: To broaden its relationship with the media, the Forum shifted its perspective from regarding the press as mainly working journalists covering its events to considering them to be important stakeholders in global society.