For some inexplicable reason, the WH still seems to send people to appear on CNN.
So, EVERYONE who appears on CNN from now on should interrupt their idiot host to ask what happened to that particular episode? Has it joined the missing security tapes from Epstein's jail cell and hilary's 30,000 missing emails?
It is amazing to me how deep the state really is. Over three years after the election, they still manage to hide and obfuscate evidence of their wrongdoing with little consequences. Why aren't these people in jail already? It's been nearly a year since Durham was given his mandate, but as of today, no one has been indicted.
Why haven't the Senate committees and subcommittees exposed all this corruption? At this rate, they'll just be getting the ball rolling in time to lose their majority and watch it get buried by the next group of corrupticrats.
Six or seven years ago, a friend gave me a portable UV-C light wand - mostly as a joke. Since the beginning of March, I've been wanding my masks, gloves, grocery bags, mail, etc., as soon as I get home.
A few seconds of UV-C supposedly does the trick.
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Dianne Feinstein's driver was probably a chinese spy.
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The CIA acknowledged that nearly all of their agents inside china were outed, captured, and executed in 2011-2013 [guess who was secretary of state at that time?].
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China has infiltrated or co-opted much of our business policy groups (McKinsey, for example).
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China has established "institutes" on most major college campuses, and "funds" scholarships and "teaching" grants. Chinese "students", who pay full costs, have inundated these colleges.
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Pregnant chinese women flock to our west coast cities to have citizen babies.
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Under the guise of efficiency and cost control, American business has transferred key parts of all the manufacturing once done in the U.S., particularly technology-based manufacturing.
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Through carefully guarded investments, china has become silent partners in many US corporations, who now kowtow to their major funders (see reddit for example).
Yet for the last three years we were subjected to round after round of increasingly absurd claims that RUSSIA! had interfered in the 2016 election. By the same media people that now shriek with outrage whenever anyone says the words "wuhan virus", or "chinese flu".
Hopefully their cataclysmic screwup of releasing the wuhan virus will finally wake us up and cause us to more closely examine the true chinese agenda, and see that they've been playing a long-game to slowly take over the west with the eager support of our own useful idiots on the left.
"They" claim the eggs/milk/pork/vegetables/fish/etc., normally sold in bulk to the now-shut down restaurants, can't be sold in groceries, since there's a shortage of adequate "consumer" packaging (1-dozen egg cartons, 1 gallon milk jugs, and so on).
Apparently we forgot to teach our millenials how to reuse egg cartons or fill their own milk containers?
So, lets dump it all and raise the prices!
I too am uneasy about the imbalance. But if anything should be considered essential, it should be food, all food, from start to finish; including growing/harvesting, processing, transportation, and point of sale. If any part of that process stops for any reason, we're in big trouble.
I'm also quite concerned that food destined for restaurants is being currently being dumped (milk in Wisconsin, potatoes in Idaho, pork in the midwest) because of weaknesses in the system of packaging & delivery to bulk consumers vs individuals in their grocery stores. People are going to consume the same amount of food even when they can't buy it in restaurants.
A crunch is coming. Alaska's fish should not be part of it, if we can figure out a reasonable way to make it work.
This says it all: "Meanwhile, SEIU 121RN, Southern California’s Union of Registered Nurses, launched an online petition accusing hospitals who did not agree to take part in the deal of “putting bottom line profits over your safety.""
Someone on the inside was going to make a lot of money off this.
A long time ago (1974), I was a welfare social worker in rural Louisiana. The single biggest problem my "clients" talked about was that their husbands couldn't live at home anymore and their children couldn't see their fathers. The state spent far more money trying to catch errant fathers in their (former) homes than on any social service that might have helped them get jobs and find a way out of poverty .