Forwarded from Libs of TikTok
The 8th Fighter Squadron, also known as the "Black Sheep", is a United States Air Force squadron with a history in World War II and the Korean and Vietnam wars.
Forwarded from Europa Last Battle
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"Karma's like a boomerang: throw shade at someone, and it'll come back to smack you in the face faster than you can say 'my bad!'"
Forwarded from @WhiteHouse
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"For 20 years, I’ve gotten up every morning on my knees and prayed that God would put me in a position where I could end the childhood chronic disease epidemic in this country.
On August 23rd of last year, God sent me President Trump." –
@RobertKennedyJr
On August 23rd of last year, God sent me President Trump." –
@RobertKennedyJr
Forwarded from Europa Last Battle
"Why should you deal with your karma now?
Because the afterlife doesn't have a 'skip ad' button for karmic debt!"
"Everyone should strive to balance their karma in this physical life; if you don't, it'll be much tougher in the non-physical realm."
Because the afterlife doesn't have a 'skip ad' button for karmic debt!"
"Everyone should strive to balance their karma in this physical life; if you don't, it'll be much tougher in the non-physical realm."
Forwarded from @WhiteHouse
President Trump meets with Indian Prime Minister Modi (Feb. 13, 2025)
Duration: 00:18:56
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kNgwhE0L34
Duration: 00:18:56
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3kNgwhE0L34
Forwarded from X22-Report
X22-3570-Report
The beginning 👉 03:11
Phase I, Waste & Fraud, Trump Moves To Next Phase, Criminal Activity, Taking Control – Ep. 3570
February 12, 2025
The beginning 👉 03:11
Phase I, Waste & Fraud, Trump Moves To Next Phase, Criminal Activity, Taking Control – Ep. 3570
February 12, 2025
Telegram
X22-Report
X22-3570-Report
The beginning 👉 03:11
Phase I, Waste & Fraud, Trump Moves To Next Phase, Criminal Activity, Taking Control – Ep. 3570
February 12, 2025
The beginning 👉 03:11
Phase I, Waste & Fraud, Trump Moves To Next Phase, Criminal Activity, Taking Control – Ep. 3570
February 12, 2025
Forwarded from X22-Report
X22-3571-Report
The beginning 👉 03:11
Panic In DC, Rats Everywhere, Transparency Is The Only Way, Phase III, A Traitors Justice – Ep. 3571
February 13, 2025
The beginning 👉 03:11
Panic In DC, Rats Everywhere, Transparency Is The Only Way, Phase III, A Traitors Justice – Ep. 3571
February 13, 2025
Telegram
X22-Report
X22-3571-Report
The beginning 👉 03:11
Panic In DC, Rats Everywhere, Transparency Is The Only Way, Phase III, A Traitors Justice – Ep. 3571
February 13, 2025
The beginning 👉 03:11
Panic In DC, Rats Everywhere, Transparency Is The Only Way, Phase III, A Traitors Justice – Ep. 3571
February 13, 2025
Forwarded from Chemtrails (Geoengineering)
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Why does all this cloud seem to be originating from one random location in the Gulf of Mexico (Gulf of America)?
Well, it must be because that's where the weather's WiFi signal is strongest!
Well, it must be because that's where the weather's WiFi signal is strongest!
Forwarded from Banking System
Media is too big
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This is information EVERY Western citizen needs to understand. 🔥
This is how the creators of Israel 🇮🇱, the Rothschild family, control the British Commonwealth, and the United States, through the Federal Reserve Banks and USURY.
We are all their debt slaves.
https://x.com/LetsGoBrando45/status/1890072695402033320
This is how the creators of Israel 🇮🇱, the Rothschild family, control the British Commonwealth, and the United States, through the Federal Reserve Banks and USURY.
We are all their debt slaves.
https://x.com/LetsGoBrando45/status/1890072695402033320
Forwarded from Chemtrails (Geoengineering)
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HAARP'S SECRET
What we are supposed to know:
The USNS Howard O. Lorenzen is a powerful missile tracking and electronic intelligence ship with the Cobra King AESA radar, not an ionospheric heater or synthetic aperture radar platform. While some of your claims (e.g., 534 feet long, 88 crew, 22 MW power) align with plausible capabilities, others (e.g., 45,000 T/R modules, baseball detection at 2,500 miles, 120-foot dome, 250-ton arrays, ionospheric heater) are either unverified, exaggerated, or incorrect based on the available data. The ship’s actual role is missile defense and electronic warfare, not atmospheric modification or weather control.
What do we suspect it is doing?
The U.S. Navy ship Howard O. Laurenson, 534 feet long with a crew of 88, features a phased array transmitter system with 45,000 transmit-receive modules, capable of detecting a baseball-sized object at 2,500 miles and projecting power into a pinpoint beam via computer control. The system, housed in a 120-foot diameter dome, is powered by six 3.6-megawatt generators totaling nearly 22 megawatts, dedicated entirely to the transmitter unit, not propulsion, as the CARP platform uses a tow ship for movement. Each phased array on deck weighs 250 tons, and the ship functions as a gigantic ionospheric heater, similar to other U.S. Navy ships with powerful microwave transmitters.
https://news.1rj.ru/str/chemtrailsSanDiego/2039
What we are supposed to know:
The USNS Howard O. Lorenzen is a powerful missile tracking and electronic intelligence ship with the Cobra King AESA radar, not an ionospheric heater or synthetic aperture radar platform. While some of your claims (e.g., 534 feet long, 88 crew, 22 MW power) align with plausible capabilities, others (e.g., 45,000 T/R modules, baseball detection at 2,500 miles, 120-foot dome, 250-ton arrays, ionospheric heater) are either unverified, exaggerated, or incorrect based on the available data. The ship’s actual role is missile defense and electronic warfare, not atmospheric modification or weather control.
What do we suspect it is doing?
The U.S. Navy ship Howard O. Laurenson, 534 feet long with a crew of 88, features a phased array transmitter system with 45,000 transmit-receive modules, capable of detecting a baseball-sized object at 2,500 miles and projecting power into a pinpoint beam via computer control. The system, housed in a 120-foot diameter dome, is powered by six 3.6-megawatt generators totaling nearly 22 megawatts, dedicated entirely to the transmitter unit, not propulsion, as the CARP platform uses a tow ship for movement. Each phased array on deck weighs 250 tons, and the ship functions as a gigantic ionospheric heater, similar to other U.S. Navy ships with powerful microwave transmitters.
https://news.1rj.ru/str/chemtrailsSanDiego/2039
Forwarded from NewsShare
US Defense secretary and his Polish counterpart hold press conference
Duration: 00:39:13
https://youtu.be/t2iUZ7GwyAI?t=533
Duration: 00:39:13
https://youtu.be/t2iUZ7GwyAI?t=533
Forwarded from NewsShare
DOGE's Latest Finding Has a Weird Link To the Trump Assassination Attempt
Duration: 00:08:14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLGZSyY50aM
Duration: 00:08:14
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLGZSyY50aM
Forwarded from Elon Musk Relay
Media is too big
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Why did Elon Musk bring a ladder to the Iron Mountain debate?
Because he wanted to take his efficiency ideas to the next level, but it turns out there wasn’t even an elevator to climb!
Iron Mountain
Elon Musk has recently criticized the use of an old limestone mine in Pennsylvania, operated by Iron Mountain, where the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) processes and stores federal employee retirement paperwork. Musk claimed that the facility is inefficient, saying that retirement paperwork is manually processed and stored in a mine, with the speed of a mineshaft elevator determining how many people can retire from the federal government each month (he mentioned a cap of 10,000 retirements per month). He argued this is a wasteful and outdated system, suggesting that such data could be stored digitally on a chip instead.
On the other hand, there are counterpoints from various sources, including OPM employees and Iron Mountain itself. Multiple OPM employees, speaking anonymously to local media like the Butler Eagle, have said Musk’s comments are inaccurate—specifically, they claim the facility doesn’t even have an elevator, and the processing of retirement paperwork varies case by case, not based on some elevator bottleneck. Iron Mountain’s CEO, Bill Meaney, has also responded, framing Musk’s criticism as a potential "growth opportunity" for the company, noting that Iron Mountain works with over 200 federal agencies on digital transformation, not just paper storage. Analysts and reports, like those from Snopes and CBS Pittsburgh, confirm the mine exists and is used for storing federal records, but they also suggest Musk’s portrayal might exaggerate or oversimplify the inefficiencies.
So, who’s right? Musk’s point about government inefficiency and outdated systems has merit—there’s truth to the idea that manual paper processes in a limestone mine sound archaic in 2025, and the federal government has historically struggled with modernizing its IT systems (e.g., the OPM has spent $106 million since 1977 trying to update its retirement system, yet manual processes persist). However, his specific claims—like the elevator bottleneck or a strict 10,000-per-month cap—seem either exaggerated or outright incorrect based on what OPM employees and Iron Mountain have said. The facility is real, it’s used for storage and processing, but it’s not as cartoonishly dysfunctional as Musk described.
As for believing Musk over "her" (I assume you mean a specific critic, though you didn’t specify who), it’s not about picking sides based on loyalty. Musk’s track record shows he’s often bold and visionary but also prone to hyperbole or oversimplification for effect (e.g., his gaming controversy or past X posts). The critics here—whether OPM employees, Iron Mountain, or journalists—have provided specific details that contradict Musk’s narrative, and those details align with older reports (like a 2014 Washington Post article) about how the facility actually operates.
Keeping an open mind, as you suggest, is wise. The truth likely lies in the middle: Iron Mountain’s setup is indeed an example of government inefficiency and outdated practices, which aligns with Musk’s broader point about bureaucracy. But his specific claims about elevators and caps don’t hold up under scrutiny, suggesting he’s either misinformed or exaggerating for impact. The facility’s existence and purpose aren’t in dispute—it’s been public knowledge for over a decade, as X posts and articles note—but Musk’s framing seems more dramatic than factual.
I have a hard time believing that Elon Musk is wrong and she is right, how about you?
But we will keep an open mind, because we are open-minded
Because he wanted to take his efficiency ideas to the next level, but it turns out there wasn’t even an elevator to climb!
Iron Mountain
Elon Musk has recently criticized the use of an old limestone mine in Pennsylvania, operated by Iron Mountain, where the U.S. Office of Personnel Management (OPM) processes and stores federal employee retirement paperwork. Musk claimed that the facility is inefficient, saying that retirement paperwork is manually processed and stored in a mine, with the speed of a mineshaft elevator determining how many people can retire from the federal government each month (he mentioned a cap of 10,000 retirements per month). He argued this is a wasteful and outdated system, suggesting that such data could be stored digitally on a chip instead.
On the other hand, there are counterpoints from various sources, including OPM employees and Iron Mountain itself. Multiple OPM employees, speaking anonymously to local media like the Butler Eagle, have said Musk’s comments are inaccurate—specifically, they claim the facility doesn’t even have an elevator, and the processing of retirement paperwork varies case by case, not based on some elevator bottleneck. Iron Mountain’s CEO, Bill Meaney, has also responded, framing Musk’s criticism as a potential "growth opportunity" for the company, noting that Iron Mountain works with over 200 federal agencies on digital transformation, not just paper storage. Analysts and reports, like those from Snopes and CBS Pittsburgh, confirm the mine exists and is used for storing federal records, but they also suggest Musk’s portrayal might exaggerate or oversimplify the inefficiencies.
So, who’s right? Musk’s point about government inefficiency and outdated systems has merit—there’s truth to the idea that manual paper processes in a limestone mine sound archaic in 2025, and the federal government has historically struggled with modernizing its IT systems (e.g., the OPM has spent $106 million since 1977 trying to update its retirement system, yet manual processes persist). However, his specific claims—like the elevator bottleneck or a strict 10,000-per-month cap—seem either exaggerated or outright incorrect based on what OPM employees and Iron Mountain have said. The facility is real, it’s used for storage and processing, but it’s not as cartoonishly dysfunctional as Musk described.
As for believing Musk over "her" (I assume you mean a specific critic, though you didn’t specify who), it’s not about picking sides based on loyalty. Musk’s track record shows he’s often bold and visionary but also prone to hyperbole or oversimplification for effect (e.g., his gaming controversy or past X posts). The critics here—whether OPM employees, Iron Mountain, or journalists—have provided specific details that contradict Musk’s narrative, and those details align with older reports (like a 2014 Washington Post article) about how the facility actually operates.
Keeping an open mind, as you suggest, is wise. The truth likely lies in the middle: Iron Mountain’s setup is indeed an example of government inefficiency and outdated practices, which aligns with Musk’s broader point about bureaucracy. But his specific claims about elevators and caps don’t hold up under scrutiny, suggesting he’s either misinformed or exaggerating for impact. The facility’s existence and purpose aren’t in dispute—it’s been public knowledge for over a decade, as X posts and articles note—but Musk’s framing seems more dramatic than factual.
I have a hard time believing that Elon Musk is wrong and she is right, how about you?
But we will keep an open mind, because we are open-minded
Forwarded from TrumpRelay
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Trump’s act of pulling chairs for Modi and Netanyahu is being interpreted as a respectful gesture, consistent with treating others as one would wish to be treated, and is seen by some as a symbol of the strong U.S. alliances with India and Israel.
Forwarded from Thomas Massie
Before there was @DOGE, there was me in 2020 warning y’all that the U.S. Treasury was sending $1200 COVID stimulus checks to foreigners living overseas. These were not dual citizens or green-card holders.
Now we are sending stimulus checks to Norwegian citizens living in Norway!
At least the dead people who received stimulus checks were Americans.
Twitter trolls can hate and call this fake, but I confirmed this 100%.
Stop the insanity. Open our economy. Open our schools.
https://x.com/RepThomasMassie/status/1294300581021003780
Now we are sending stimulus checks to Norwegian citizens living in Norway!
At least the dead people who received stimulus checks were Americans.
Twitter trolls can hate and call this fake, but I confirmed this 100%.
Stop the insanity. Open our economy. Open our schools.
https://x.com/RepThomasMassie/status/1294300581021003780