902 Comments
User's avatar
Jpeach's avatar

The DOJ should consider investigating Mayor Wu of Boston. Her actions or inactions, are consistent with the CCP’s asymmetric war on America.

Torrance Stephens's avatar

#Facts.

Hat tip to Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche.

He is putting in work.

He the DOJ MVP.

He is the Atlanta Braves of the Administration.

He should check out the folks (judges and DAs) releasing all these criminals and repeat offenders back on the streets too: See https://torrancestephensphd.substack.com/p/mass-psychosis-and-hug-a-thug-crime

LMWC's avatar

I can’t speak for all the various state allegations, Jeff mentioned, but Michigan’s Democratic AG, Dana Nessel suddenly finding a conscience and bringing charges against Fay Bodoun is a Trojan Horse. Nessel is termed out after 2026. She, along with Governor Whitmer, also termed out and Fay Bodoun’s buddy in the 20 million embezzled, and finally, termed out SoS, Jocelyn Benson, (D), who is the Dem running for governor. Nessel made life hell for the people of Michigan during the whole of 2020. She prosecuted anyone who stood up to lockdown rules. She prosecuted Rick Snyder, former Michigan governor in 2016 for the Flint water crisis, (years later the case was dropped). She prosecuted 16 alternate electors for daring to sign their names in the 2020 stolen election. Most of these alternatives were in their 70’s and 80’s. This lawsuit was finally dropped after 4 years.

Because she is termed out she is looking to suddenly appear moderate. She is prosecuting two of the monopoly utility companies in the state for rate hike requests several times now. Utility companies ask for twice what they want. She prosecutes, and asks for a couple hundred million less. They get a hundred million less, still come out gouging their rate payers, but she tried!

Fay Bodoun will never pay back what she stole and will never see prison time, but it sure gets media optics. Meanwhile our state is circling the drain.

Annette Feldpausch's avatar

So glad you addressed this. These vile Ds who act like moderates at just the right time (think Elissa Slotkin) seem to actually fool people. It is downright maddening!

LMWC's avatar

I remember quite well, Slotkin running for U.S. senate, appearing to be moderate and recalling how she had worked with President Trump in the past and would again. There are no moderate Dems any longer. And I still don’t believe that the people of Michigan who elected Trump overwhelmingly in 2024, didn’t bother to vote for the name right below his, Mike Rogers for U.S. senate. Not buying it.

S Doherty's avatar

It's great to see your response here, Cuz. I think there has been a lot of fraud in Michigan's elections.

Lone Star exile's avatar

A growing number of Americans are concluding that in one way or another, ALL of our elections are fake. ALL.

Just think how easily we get offended by that extreme conclusion, but then remember how wrong we have been for the last 11 years as we kept getting red-pilled more and more...

More exposure is coming...

Fred's avatar

Perhaps we could enlist the serices of tha National Guard to run elections.....or the Catholic church...ANYONE except local politicians!

Annette Feldpausch's avatar

For sure cousin! I bet much more than we could ever expect, and recovery will take a long time, as we both know a lot of people who are very solidly misguided.

Annette Feldpausch's avatar

Thank you, Suzy for letting me know about C&C!

S Doherty's avatar

You are so welcome, Annette! I read an article about Jeff Childers and his "Coffee and Covid." I was intrigued when the author suggested that his work was reminiscent of Rush Limbaugh's broadcasts.

Phil Denter's avatar

While cancers continue to sky-rocket on account of Trump "fathering" a 10-year experimental-platform drug in 10 months.

-----

Corrupt Donkeys hardly proves that Elephants are good.

CecilRhodes's avatar

I noticed that ever since Whitmer was caught by the press hiding in Trump's white house last year, something fundamentally changed. I believe they have the goods on both of them and are applying pressure to get cooperation. Michigan had the same COVID nursing home death pattern as NY, had such obvious 2020 cheating it was actually caught in a northern county and in the Detroit area, there's been no protests and no visibility in Michigan in regard to ICE or any other hot button issue. It's a swing state so it's unbelievable nothing is going on to secure it. Makes you go hmmmmm.

LMWC's avatar
May 12Edited

I’m not sure about that. President Trump very much wants Selfridge Air Force base reopened and brought up to par. He was supposedly working with Whitmer to do just that, but the project has been sitting around the Lansing capitol for almost a year and not being brought to the Legislature. I think she is slow walking it until after the Midterms to see if the Dems take over and keep control of the Michigan governorship. Then it will be pushed through, they’ll take credit for it, and it will cost 3 times as much.

She has greater aspirations, have no doubt. I would love it if he did have something on her.

Freebird's avatar

And speaking of Whitmer, I’ve read that she is George Soros’ niece…that would make sense.

Michelle Enmark, DDS's avatar

As much as I would like that to be true, Freebird, ans it would explain a lot and could potentially aid in her downfall, after a little research, I have come to the conclusion that she isn’t related to him.

Marty Kiner's avatar

Just spitballing here but Whitmere has presidential aspirations and Nessel may hope to get the nod for AG? 🤔 Those two are the worst! And Benson, how the heck does a SOS conduct their own election? Why aren’t they people in Michigan howling about that? She’s as corrupt as they come!

SD Scott's avatar

Well it worked in AZ, so…

User's avatar
Comment deleted
May 12
Comment deleted
Duckduffer's avatar

Hobbs and Gallegos must share some DNA. Both are just embarrassing and both sound, literally, like teenagers when they speak. It's exhausting as an AZ resident to hear them, sometimes I have to run my fingernails down a chalkboard for some relief....

LMWC's avatar

Nothing in the Michigan constitution says it can not be done.

Elaine Russky's avatar

Whitmer has presidential aspirations and I have aspirations for a new Maybach. Both of us should give up.

SHug's avatar

What you want to bet her "prosecution" will not be up to par for conviction?

David Nelson's avatar

I suspect AG Nessel already knows all the ways she'll mis-handle the prosecution to get the defendant off scot-free with no chance of retrial. And, can executive-branch heads pardon criminals for crimes in which they themselves participated or benefited? One would like to think not.

TDawg's avatar

My Spidey senses started up as soon as I read about Nessel. Corrupt to the core.

Freebird's avatar

Thank you for pointing out what a snake in the grass Dana Nessel is! Let’s hope and pray that her egregious past actions don’t fall under the radar after she leaves office.

I was especially appalled at her prosecution of the 16 alternate electors who signed their names to a document which they believed to be true (and it was)! Thank God that lawsuit was finally dropped, but it’s hard to imagine the stress those people endured thanks to this corrupt, vindictive AG! I hope to goodness that the tables are turned on her and she finds herself facing justice. Real justice.

Barbls's avatar

Jeff addressed Nessel's likely reasons for indicting Beydoun in Sunday's C&C. The feds were going to do it, so she brought it in state and will claim to be tough on lawbreakers, while not blaming Whitmer for taking all that campaign cash and not noticing that Beydoun was a crook when she appointed her to a state-run board related to “business development.”

LMWC's avatar

Thanks, since I don’t get the Sunday edition. That’s a “could be” scenario, for sure.

jmsmithmd's avatar

Nessel will leave out a step and have the case thrown out. Hope the feds are watching.

Barbls's avatar

Agree. Hope the feds are watching. Hope they're developing a case against Nessel herself as well.

Fla Mom's avatar

I saw someone's comment elsewhere that Nessel is prosecuting Fay Beydoun only to keep Trump's feds from carrying out the prosecution, perhaps to make it a less aggressive prosecution. Exited to add: I see Barbls' memory is better than mine, and she remembered that it was Jeff who said that, on Sunday.

Beckadee's avatar

MN got a plea out of a somalian fraudster [over $10 million] and he got probation. Waltz and Ellison at it again. I see the same with Nessel.

LMWC's avatar

It took covid for me to see how interconnected across states these evil plans were. The playbook was the same from California east to New York and Maine. Anywhere there was a Democratic governor.

Torrance Stephens's avatar

Sounds like an All-Star to me. Thanks for bringing Nessel to my attention.

Kat's avatar

I can bet the Dems will consider Whitmer for a POTUS run!!

Annie Rudy's avatar

But these cases take time to build and Todd didn’t just start from scratch. I’m glad he was handed the baton for the arrests but it does take a team. A team with a strong leader.

Skeptical Actuary's avatar

Agreed.

I don't particularly agree with Jeff's assessment that Pam Bondi was doing good work. Her staff may have been doing work, but the sudden uptick in arrests soon after her firing implies she may have been holding those arrests back.

Elaine Russky's avatar

Doesn't that mean she was preparing those cases during her tenure? Why would she do that if she is as bad as people say? I'm just asking; I have no bone to pick (ew!!) with Bondi.

zabs's avatar

I agree with you Elaine.

Phil Denter's avatar

Todd Blanche's first act as Acting Attorney General was to announce to us that we'll never see the incriminating half of the Epstein Files.

America is ran by Luciferian pedophiles but look at the crooked mayor in San Fran or Boston.

-----

It's getting near time for us to put up or shut up when it comes to freedom, eh?

Yuri Bezmenov's avatar

Seconded. Boston mayor Wu and Texas senate minority leader Wu are subverting America. Be vigilant around CCP unrestricted warfare: https://yuribezmenov.substack.com/p/california-wealth-tax-ccp-sabotage

Gym+Fritz's avatar

So that’s how future wars will be fought - by using massive amounts of foreign money and technical expertise in support of selected / compliant political candidates in various western democracies? (and in the case of Brits, actual British boots on the ground directed by local, but Labour-funded NGOs). Would this be better than $billions in drones & rockets and millions of dead? Is this the way we ease ourselves into a kinder, gentler, one-party world?

Vet nor's avatar

Well, Mao may not have uses missles, but he still managed to kill millions to achieve his "peacable kingdom"

Lydia Lozano's avatar

Except that you completely ignore human nature here.

Gym+Fritz's avatar

You’re absolutely right. Human nature is the 900 pound gorilla in this and every other situation. I’m being facetious in my comment above, but yes, human nature is our foundational problem.

Matt L.'s avatar

Given our present nuclear age and extinction risk that rides with it, this Trojan Horse approach is a plausible 3rd way.

Willing Spirit's avatar

This is the WWIII we’ve been living for a few decades now.

Mark Levin has a good video about it here.

https://youtu.be/lwBVwv6pUY8?si=MrpG9LPZa5d6ewIF

CK's avatar

Israel has been doing this for decades.

Willing Spirit's avatar

Ah…Israel…the Jews…it’s always the Jews causing the trouble…Little Israel, smaller than New Jersey, with missiles and rockets sending its citizens into bomb shelters at all hours of the day and night.

It was originally to include Jordan and the West Bank and Gaza, but immediately Jordan was given to the Palestinians (Arabs)as their ‘homeland’. (1946). Then came the Oslo Accords (2005) when the Israeli government agreed to remove all Jewish citizens (who had to forfeit their very lucrative florist and agricultural businesses without compensation) and turn Gaza over to Arafat’s ‘so called Palestinians’.

At which time, the ‘Palestinians’ trashed all the business infrastructures left by the Jews, started crying out for international aid and erecting massive tunnels and military outposts under schools and hospitals and salivating for the day they would drive the Israelis into the sea.

Then came October 07, 2023, when tired of waiting and perhaps driven mad by the site of female flesh at a concert across the fence, the Hamas Islamists launched a massacre and killed 1,200 innocent Jewish men, women, boys, girls, babies…. Some believe they jumped the gun and spoiled a larger plot for a soon to come multi pronged, multi directional attack involving Hezbollah and other players.

God forbid Israel should act in anyway to defend itself.

I stand with Israel.

CK's avatar

So your position is that Israel has no influence over our politics. Got it.

Willing Spirit's avatar

Is that what I said?

Can you read?

I stand with Israel. She has huge influence over my politics, especially considering that I’m not Jewish and she is a tiny nation (one needs a magnifying glass to find her on the globe).

Critical Thinker's avatar

Nice narrative...too bad it doesn't hold up to much scrutiny.

Willing Spirit's avatar

Too bad you’re blinded by antisemitism. What did you find that wouldn’t hold up to scrutiny?

David Nelson's avatar

Surprisingly, no, given the risk, as I recall. AI sez: "Jonathan Pollard [convicted 1986 for passing thousands of classified documents to Israel over 18 months] received around $45,000 to $50,000 in cash payments from Israeli handlers during his 18-month spying operation from 1984-1985, plus gifts like a diamond and sapphire ring and trips to Europe."

Incidentally, the AI followup sez: "As of 2026, Pollard lives in Jerusalem, Israel, where he immigrated on December 30, 2020, after his U.S. parole ended. He's been politically active, recently announcing a bid to run for the Israeli Knesset." Not too shabby. It could be that the retirement plan is mouth-wateringly attractive.

Willing Spirit's avatar

You ever read about how well the millionaire Islamist leaders of Gaza live in Qatar? How about the recently reported seizure of fabulous, luxury properties of Iranian officials in places like Paris?

You suppose the Islamist top tier has mouth-watering attractive retirement plans?

How about the huge payoffs to families of Islamic ‘suicide bombers’?

What’s with the one-sidedness critique, as if I didn’t know?

MarkGW's avatar

I would be ok and actually appreciate some reporting on corrupt republicans as well because I know the uni-party runs deep and RINOs are in on the easy grift as well. And the DOJ should not be shy about it because these traitors need to go as well. Bring it all into the light.

SHug's avatar

Look at the ones paying upwards of $20 million for a senate campaign - that's the first red flag. (There really needs to be some kind of cap on these campaigns.) Why would they want to put that much money to a seat that pays about $175k? On the take? Sure, but who is doing the bribing? Find and prosecute the ones behind them in the shadows and you'll have some people begin acting better.

Something needs to be done about Soros, Singham, Gates and company. Any ideas?

TDawg's avatar

They’re working on it, I assure you. They’ve been tracking Soros for years. He’s hidden all his stuff behind NGO’s.

TDawg's avatar

I think they should be outlawed.

Leskunque Lepew's avatar

Outlaw Soros et-al

Susan Seas's avatar

Right‼️ What in the H do they spend millions on? TV commercials and billboards? 🤯

David Nelson's avatar

SHug, if conservatives shy away from campaigns "because they're expensive," the other side will have no qualms about buying every seat in site. At some point, conservatives have to pony up to pay what's necessary to ensure their voices will be represented--at least until there is, ever, true, sweeping, campaign reform.

We also don't want ballots with 5 million names on them because it only costs a Dollar to run (and I would sooo be on the ballot at that price point).

David Nelson's avatar

Back to say that "the other/dark side" even worked the neat magic of using tax money in the form of USAID "aid" to non-governmental organizations to fund--their campaigns!! No wonder conservatives were walking around shell-shocked with the constant feeling of WHAT is HAPPENING??

Fla Mom's avatar

Running a statewide campaign is very expensive, the more so in populous states like Florida. If the regressive "Progressives" had not passed the 17th Amendment, the state legislatures would have continued to choose Senators, as the Founders designed, and the campaign money would be de minimus (other than the bribes that likely would have been paid under the table).

Jpeach's avatar

RINOs are definitely in on Financial and Voting Fraud.

Kat's avatar

McConnell and Thune for sure!!

P.M. Carpenter's avatar

So true, and it should start with a particularly prominent RINO whose personal wealth via "easy grift" has ballooned by more than $3 billion since 20 January 2025.

Kat's avatar

Trump has made that much $$$ in just the court cases that he won!!

HillsideFarmer's avatar

Yes. Mayor Wu gives me the creeps. I used to live in the Boston area; glad I'm not there anymore.

pretty-red, old guy's avatar

and, the dingbat Frey in Minneapolis.

Really though, I am not biased.

Nikki (Gayle) Nicholson's avatar

I actually thought it was her 🇺🇸🤔

Skeptical Actuary's avatar

A college roommate of mine grew up in Arcadia, CA and still lives there. Her house is a basic 1950s ranch house.

Apparently Arcadia has attracted wealthy Chinese and/or Chinese Americans who come in, tear down perfectly good but modest houses, and put up McMansions on those small Southern California lots.

Based on what I've trends I've heard for LA in general, there are probably a lot of homes owned by wealthy Chinese that aren't even lived in.

Arcadia is just east of Altadena, and some parts of it did burn last year.

A.'s avatar

Do you know Vancouver? You might as well say it is an arm of Beijing now.

However, I find it funny that the Asian Siberian descendants of the original British Columbian Indian tribes are going to do battle with the new modern CCP Chinese property investors there who now own much of the city. Because the upside-down new principle in BC is that if an Indian tribe claims land in that province, the land ownership goes back to them. Another Globalist destruction tactic.

Could be interesting,....

C. Wilson's avatar

In the nature of "we are not talking about what we are doing," perhaps the assumption is "when" not "if" on this.

Dave Slough's avatar

Wu is definitely a CCP stooge

Demeisen's avatar

As for the reflecting pool, I suspect a lot of major Democrat politicians (as well as a few RINOs and the various agents of The Illuminati wandering around DC) are primarily concerned that it will function as a reflecting surface. You know, a mirror. I wonder why they would be afraid of mirrors, hmmm?

Unwoke in Idaho's avatar

Oh please, most of them are vampires, they have no self reflection.

Freedom Fox's avatar

What if I were to tell you that the The Cultural Landscape Foundation (TCLF), the organization filing the lawsuits against both the Reflecting Pond and White House East Wing renovation projects was founded by none other than Sally and Tersh Boasberg? Mother and father of Judge James "Jeb" Boasberg.

https://www.tclf.org/news/features/inaugural-sally-boasberg-founders-fellow

https://en.geneastar.org/genealogy/boasbergjam/james-boasberg

Mother Sally left her earthly bounds fourteen years ago and has been in Lucifer's warm embrace since then, nothing on the timescale of eternity and all. But Father Tersh is still here. I'm sure it's all just one big coincidence, though. The vampires are truly bloodline demons from hell.

Kat's avatar

Good gosh!! The Boasbergs are definitely a mental health case with their pure hatred of Trump!!

Mike Gustine's avatar

I would say that seems very unsurprising.

Tom F's avatar

on the tclf page the reflecting pond is bright blue

Demeisen's avatar

Actually I just got your 2nd joke. Yes, very little self-reflection.

Skenny's avatar

"Those people are crazy." - DJT, 2026

Jpeach's avatar

If it was up to the Democrats, the reflecting pool would be half red and half green.

liz perez's avatar

With a black hammer and sickle in the middle.

David Nelson's avatar

I'm really surprised it wasn't ever done up in rainbow-flag colors. (Right now they're kicking themselves: "If Trump can DO it, we COULDA done it!")

Starsky's avatar

Or they would paint “Black Lives Matter” down the middle of it.

Mike Gustine's avatar

Or "tax the rich". No, that would be too on point for the congress folks.

Doug's avatar

Or blue and yellow...

Lydia Lozano's avatar

:) It used to be a sort of grayish brown. Depending on the light.

Roger Beal's avatar

Zombies and vampires cast no reflections, so.

David Nelson's avatar

I didn't know that about zombies, Roger, thank you.

Elaine Russky's avatar

Zombies don't cast reflections? Outrageous! This is no reflection on you, but please cite your sources! After dark, of course.

Ruth's avatar

I'm not sure about that. Narcissus, the original narcissist, fell in love with himself looking in a pool of water.

I just don't think the progressive brain processes "truth" well at all.

Crash Pile's avatar

Was Narcissus looking into a contemplative gray or optimistic blue pool?

Fred's avatar

TDS is nearly impossible to cure; narcissism is forever........

A.'s avatar
May 12Edited

Actually, there IS treatment for what you are calling Narcissism. Contrary to popular opinion.

Narcissism, or the Cluster-B Personality Disorders, begin as a childhood defence mechanism linked to an Attachment Disorder. Not the child's fault. But is is the fault of the adult who grows out of that child, if they fail to address this disorder later.

How? The Therapies known as EMDR and as Mentalizing-therapy have ben used successfully in some such persons.

In childhood, when an Attachment Disorder appears as Reactive Attachment Disorder (RAD), it can be successfully treated through Therapeutic Parenting by adoptive or foster parents trained and willing in this method.

Matt L.'s avatar

A. IMO, the cure to narcissism is to enter into a personal relationship with God (and preferably the Trinity) where a human humbles oneself before our Creator in authentic thanksgiving. The 1st commandment is the most important… ‘You shall have no other gods before me’

A.'s avatar

Thanks for that, Matt. Perhaps you are right.

Pathological Narcissism is a mental illness due to abuse or neglect or trauma problems in early childhood, where the Attachment with the mother failed.

Matt L.'s avatar

I personally know of several in my faith journey who have experienced traumatic childhoods. They have also received healing and peace of mind by accepting Jesus as their Lord, and Savior. It doesn’t work for everyone. Some can’t quite get there, the damage is so great.

A.'s avatar

But neither does its mirror-image opposite, the far-rightwing sorts. Two peas in a pod, really, in terms of how they each behave.

A.'s avatar

You might say that the far-leftwing and the far-rightwing are in a co-dependency relationship with one another. A dance. One extremist group could not exist without the opposing extremist group.

It gives meaning to "divide and conquer". If they both stopped reacting to one another, we would all return to normalcy in the middle.

Doug's avatar

The yin and the yang continue rotating against one another forever...

A.'s avatar

Freud had an explanation too. He imagined a linear spectrum of Id/EGO/Superego. With the EGO (SELF) at the midpoint as the homeostasis. The midpoint is where a person should strive to be. It is the balance.

Jung went a bit further by newly describing the ancient Greek concept of Enantiodromia, where the extremes of the spectrum eventually destroy themselves through extremism.

Doug's avatar

Thanks! I now have a reading assignment for today!

Mike Gustine's avatar

We shall call him Cygnus, the God of Balance he shall be :-)

Guy White's avatar

“If you look down and see a cheerful, patriotic blue, you might accidentally experience a moment of joy, which is strictly prohibited on federal property.” Absolutely true, at least from the Marxist perspective. A new acronym to suggest! “Make America Joyful Again” (MAJA) We even have a theme song already:

“I’ve got that joy, joy, joy, joy, deep in my heart, deep in my heart….”❤️

Leslie Walker's avatar

"I want it so blue that astronauts can see it from space."

🤣🤣🤣

Leslie Walker's avatar

"I want it so blue that astronauts can see it from space."

🤣🤣🤣

Elaine Russky's avatar

And the peace that passes all understanding . . . Sing it, Guy!

Old fossil's avatar

No, they are just trying to tie up DOJ resources. The more on defense the less available for offense

David Nelson's avatar

I just heard a story from a related-by-marriage friend who was talking about the early days of his 40+years career. He said that when he was brand-new on the job, he was trying to deal with a customer who was clearly being unreasonable and had ordered him to "go get your manager because I'm going to sue your company for all its worth!"

Frightened, he dutifully went to the manager and laid out the situation. The manager's answer surprised him.

"Go ask the guy if he's already picked out his lawyer..."

"Why?"

"Tell him he can have ours because we won't need one..."

THAT's what these Democratᵀᴹ flim-flam lawsuits amount to, and the DOJ should assign their greenest lawyers to them, 1 per case, because they'll need experience and the best possible experience will be had pleading "can't-lose/cake-walk trials."

MCav's avatar

I think they're mad because they cannot use the money for political paybacks and kickbacks!

Melissa S's avatar

I would guess that the company given the contract is not a favorite among democrats to receive their no-bid contracts. I know nothing about it, but just assuming. In my blue city with near total democrat control of the city and county you can always make a safe bet that a certain company that donates near totally to democrat politicians will get all the road work contracts.

SHug's avatar

Nah, the company the Park Service recommended wanted $330 million (that's a company to look into). DJT said "screw that!" and called his favorite pool company, who gave him a price of 1.8 just to clean it out, scrub it down & paint, but there was more extensive work to be done to stop leaks, fix damage and clean up before the painting, and the expedited rush to have it all complete by July 4, brought it up to $13 million. Still better than the original $330 million bid.

Demeisen's avatar

Reading Art of The Deal gives you a deep appreciation for just how practical a deal-maker Trump is when it comes to construction work. The typical graft-lined, pork-wrapped, greased palm stack of vertical contracts that is the average government contract is probably to Trump what a red flag is to a bull. I'd bet it just pisses him off.

David Nelson's avatar

"graft-lined, pork-wrapped, greased palm stack"

Visceral effect received! Looking for a paper towel for my eyes...

Demeisen's avatar

If they are bleeding, I apologize. Though that usually happens with bug-eyed girl leftist memes for me...

Tonya's avatar

I noticed that my TDS acquaintances jumped right on that $13 mil compared to $1.8 mil, but they said nothing about the $330 mil bid.

Elaine Russky's avatar

He probably didn't have time for the bidding process, because he wanted it done for the semiquincentennial festivities.

CeeMcG's avatar

Reposting your comment on LinkedIn, this is too good not to share. Do you have a source for this? Thanks!

CeeMcG's avatar

Good grief! 🤯

Jayne Doe's avatar

Maybe it reflects DEW's, direct energy weapons, with the blue and they can all go jump in it if they're attacked ; )

shayne's avatar

I would not be surprised if you are over the target 🎯😉

Tonya's avatar

And if suffering an aesthetic injury is worthy of a lawsuit, can we all start filing lawsuits based on "Constitutional injury," that is, to repeal any law over anything that is not an expressly enumerated power?

happyinfl's avatar

How about pig rings, face piercings & tats? I can't look at some people that wait on me in a store or restaurant!

Demeisen's avatar

Pig rings. That's a great term for those ugly things.

happyinfl's avatar

It's what they put in the pig's nose to lead them around or to prevent foraging, among other usages. Don't see why girls would use them. And they are repulsive- cannot look at these girls.

Pandemic of the Indoctrinated's avatar

Is this a subconscious Confederate grey from which the democrat party cannot seem to disentangle itself? vs Union blue?

David Nelson's avatar

Very insightful. But no, not the color grey any Democratᵀᴹ would actually die for...

Elle's avatar

I think I'll paint my roof blue...

CMCM's avatar

I live in the mountains and my house has a blue metal roof. I love it!

Conservative Contrarian's avatar

The reflecting pool is fighting global warming. It reflects sunlight back into space, removing a potential .0000024 degrees of heat, enough to probably save a polar bear or two, and maybe even an iceberg.

🌞 🥵

Demeisen's avatar

No idea this would be such an interesting topic. I was indeed thinking of vampires. It also reminded me of this oldie-but-goodie: https://babylonbee.com/news/democrats-hiss-in-terror-as-acb-pulls-out-crucifix

Media Luna's avatar

The swimming-pool blue in the swamp country club covers with make up all the muck inside.

Clean, lovely, and hopeful sage green would be my preference regardless of political parties or lawyers or judges or lawsuits!

User's avatar
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May 12
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David Nelson's avatar

"Spirit, that made those heroes dare/To die, and leave their children free,/

Bid Time and Nature gently spare/The shaft we raise to them and thee."

WHY can't "we" unite in a shared appreciation of the sacrifices our "sire and sons" have made for us? WHAT is wrong with "us?"

User's avatar
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May 12
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David Nelson's avatar

You have the spotlight trained directly on the source of America's problems; it is precisely WHY we cannot "unite." Before male and female, "we" cannot agree on what "life" is, let alone pretend to be able to measure its "potential value." Thank you, sister, and God keep you and yours.

Don Ruthig's avatar

Help! Chicagoans are experiencing a massive epidemic of "aesthetic injury" as the Obama Center is about to open. Is there a vaccine?

JasonT's avatar

They destroyed a lovely public park to make way for The One’s monstrosity. He was too cheap to buy his own land?

JudyC's avatar

And yet no one sued to stop the building of that eyesore!

SD Scott's avatar

You have to show ID to get in there.

David Nelson's avatar

"I just want to use the restroom. I've been holding it for just such an occasion."

David Nelson's avatar

(And God help you if you try to show a VOTER id...)

CeeMcG's avatar

$850 million so far for that ugly piece of garbage. Plus another $200 million from the city of Chicago for infrastructure. I doubt Chicago could afford that.

Fabes55's avatar

Why don't Chicagoans experience aesthetic injury in March when the Chicago River gets turned green?

Juju's avatar

This should be the defense argument!!!!

CaliforniaLost's avatar

Beat me to the comment!!

Hotdam's avatar

There should be a warning someplace close to that “Obamination” stating “looking at this piece of ugly concrete is dangerous to your health and may cause blindness to facts!”.

Melissa MB's avatar

That is the ugliest building ever!

Lori's avatar

We should make a class action suit for aesthetic injury by being exposed to the violent facial expressions/body language that dems display as they spew their hateful rhetoric.

MS's avatar

I think it'll require surgery to remove.

Unwoke in Idaho's avatar

Federal judges have a sinecure for life. If they don’t like dealing with these cases, they can always quit, but then they'd have to give up the lifetime sinecure. What to do, what to do.

Here’s a thought. Something as preposterous and loony as the reflecting pool lawsuit should be summarily thrown out as being preposterous and loony.

Torrance Stephens's avatar

I wrote/suggested:

"Pass a law that holds the judges accountable! I think judges should have malpractice insurance just like doctors. And if someone dies or is injured as a result of their negligence, then they are sued into oblivion. Jail if it happens more than once."

I posted the link earlier, but here it is again on my Substack FWIW: https://shorturl.at/bNiF4

Lori's avatar

Fantastic idea!

Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

I have come to believe that vaccines are neither safe or effective. Any and all of them worthless. Dr. Mike Yeadon, a former Pfizer exec, goes further. He asserts that viruses do not exist, and historical medicine used that lie to get to the false premise of vaccines.

LMWC's avatar

Every time someone suffers a stroke now, has undiagnosed, sudden heart problems, rare, turbo cancers, or sudden auto immune diseases, I wonder if they had the death shots.

Joanie Higgs's avatar

Same. Not to mention the many who, at least up until a year or so ago, just up and died in their sleep (SADS).

The Great Resist's avatar

A local radio personality in my town died in his sleep last week, age 43. A friend who knows him said he definitely took all the Covid shots and boosters, at the insistence of his family.

Joanie Higgs's avatar

Wow, okay. My sister also took all the boosters so it's anyone's guess if she'll go that way, too. Her husband, who was fit and healthy, recently dropped unconscious to the floor of their kitchen and died of brain injury.

The Great Resist's avatar

I’m so sorry to hear that! I worry about friends and relatives who are still getting jabbed on schedule.

Mike Gustine's avatar

That is sad. My father is 84 and has had all the shots and gets the boosters, and he's healthier than I am. Seems like it doesn't kill everybody I guess. Or it's just because he got real food and cleaner air and water most of his life maybe (and only one or two vaccines as a child, none in the first year) so his system is better at clearing poisons, I don't know.

Dee's avatar

Just last month my cousin’s stepsister unexpectedly died in her sleep. There’s no doubt she took the jab, likely boosted too.

Joanie Higgs's avatar

I did suspect it must still be happening. Sorry for her loss.

Richard Whitney's avatar

My daughter's friend's father died in his sleep last week. I assume he took the shots.

Mrs. RW

Ryan Kreager's avatar

My husband developed a massive autoimmune disorder (Neuromylitis Optica, akin to MS) only weeks after being coerced into taking the shot for his job.

His father developed Shogruns (when you can’t produce saliva) after taking the shot + booster.

His mother had to have a triple bypass after shot + booster.

My lived experience is that YES the “death shots” are causing all the issues you mentioned above.

- Ryan’s Wife

Laura Barrett's avatar

I’m so sorry!! I was given and diagnosis of secondary progressive multiple sclerosis in 2015 after multiple years and different diagnoses from symptoms that started in 2009. The story is long but antidote I believe that diagnosis was the result of vaccines one of them being the experimental. The experimental VAX was given to me to determine if my body was making antibodies/my immune system was functioning as they were trying to diagnose me. I became much more ill after that.The good news is I healed and am happy to share my protocol since the diseases are so closely related.

Ryan Kreager's avatar

Laura, Ryan here - I would love it if you can share your protocol! I've had some good luck with the Wahls Diet and protocol, but I would like to get the last 10% of the healing I seem to be stuck on. I tried messaging you but it's disabled; can you share it here?

Laura Barrett's avatar

I’m happy to share!! It’s a bunch of data so messaging would probably be better. I didn’t know my messages were off so i’ll fix that first. I’m out of town until Tuesday and unsure of my schedule, so i’ll reach out on Wednesday for sure.

SHug's avatar

RW, Sjögren's. I'm afflicted with this also. With me, mostly my eyes, though I do have to keep water/drinks at hand all the time. I use many of the single use eye drop vials daily. I don't trust the larger bottles anymore after all the "incidents" with contamination over the past few years.

Sjogren's also can cause fatigue, joint pain, muscle pain, skin rashes, and other potential areas: Dryness can affect the nose, throat, and organs such as the lungs, kidneys, and liver. Everything irritates the skin. Never feel hydrated. (I like Fiji water - sourced from a protected underground aquifer and contains natural minerals and electrolytes, including silica. Ph of 7.7 ).

It's just yet another comorbidity to stack with rheumatoid arthritis. My dad had severe RA from his mid 20s on, but this didn't hit me until I was in my mid 40s and it hit hard, all at once. My PC was horrified when he finally tested my RA factor - normal is 0-13, mine was 418.

I greatly empathize with your husband - anything which messes with the myelin sheath is debilitating. When I have a flare mine get inflamed.

Carol DelRosso's avatar

I’m so sorry to hear about your Sjogrens diagnosis. My mother suffered horribly with this for most of her adult life. She also had severe TA. It’s not a common disease and I don’t hear about it much. She had it I think started in the 1970s-80s so it’s been a while ago. Of course they tell you they don’t know what causes it but they of course know how to treat it. What I do know happened to her was she developed an infection in her parotid glands before that and they gave her a new antibiotic which was tetracycline. I guess it was so new they didn’t know that sun exposure while you’re on it would cause problems. She was in Florida at the time and loved the sun and she developed a severe case of hives over her entire body and had to be hospitalized. After that incident she was never the same and any medication only caused severe side effects. After reading as much as I do about health I’m thinking the antibiotic must have destroyed her gut microbiome, which is your entire immune system. Everything depends on that. Read about Jordan Rubin’s experience in The Maker’s Diet. Fascinating! I wish I knew then what I know now. It might have helped her. Also just the other day Joel Salatin (Polyface Farm) made the comment that soil micro organisms mimic the exact same environment in your gut. I think it all warrants further investigations to get to the root cause.

Melissa MB's avatar

I’m so sorry. That’s a lot for one family. My brother in law has some weird bacteria infection in his knee that his dr wife had and it took a year to cure it, and he also passed out for no reason….still doesn’t see what cause it.

Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

It has become a safe assumption.

KBB's avatar

It's the presumptive cause unless proven otherwise.

CeeMcG's avatar

We have friends who keep getting awful colds and flu illnesses over and over again. All took multiple Covid shots. I keep wondering if the IgG switching caused by the shots is at work there.

taxpayer's avatar

Of course most of them did, but people have always died from lots of different things. And nowadays we're exposed to a lot more EMF than in the past; I don't know if anyone has tried to estimate the impacts.

SHug's avatar

I'm also very concerned with the EMF levels we are exposed to - and stack all the aluminum & mercury in vaxxes on top and it's close to a foil in microwave situation. All the data centers they want to build all over is not a good situation either. We are getting very low on clean fresh water, which they use for cooling, as well.

jan's avatar

Don't forget the proven toxins they're spraying overhead daily

jan's avatar

Don't forget the proven toxins they're spraying overhead daily

AZGal55's avatar

Especially when the person is younger and previously healthy. Death rates have gone up in the younger age categories. We’ve seen sudden deaths in young healthy athletes and number of celebrities.

Nancy Benedict's avatar

Agreed. And could RFK please hurry? My niece is pregnant with her first child and will be following whatever her doctors say, along with the CDC. Thankfully, the CDC vaccine schedule has been trimmed. I am walking a fine line of giving good info in a non-threatening manner.

SHug's avatar

Send her the book Turtles All the Way Down, by RFK, jr. Could even send it anonymously.

If you want to try and open a discussion, it could start with: "there is so much new health information coming out now! I wish I had access to all this new info then! How did we not know these things back then?" and see how she reacts. If she's questioning at all, it might be a way to slide in the film or some books or just report findings. A MidWestern Dr has a great substack with some childbirth and baby facts too. CHD has all kinds of info and interviews etc.

That's how I did it with my niece. Started with the book, then a couple of CHD reports....... Now, she is all in.

Lori's avatar

A few anonymous. The book is fab and best 500 pages I ever read. All papers cited and after reading it, I am a non vaxxer for life now.

Doug's avatar

I had the Kindle version on my phone, but I never got past a couple of chapters because I hate reading on my phone. So today I bought the book, and dammit, I'm going to read it!

Lori's avatar

I have the book too. I really loved this book. A real lifesaver! Enjoy:}

Annette's avatar

Turtles all the Way Down is really thorough and walks you through the shaky history of how vaccines have been shown to be “effective.” Chapter 1 has enough evidence to show that no vaccine has been tested against a true placebo. Phenomenal book but long (chapter 1 is about 70 pages). Here’s a great (and concise) vaccine truth article that really needs to be widely shared: https://drwojakmd.substack.com/p/the-definitive-vaccine-crash-course

Nancy Benedict's avatar

Good ideas, thanks. I am a paid subscriber to AMD and will look that up.

Lori's avatar

TURTLES ALL THE WAY DOWN ROCKS!

Maggie Think of Me's avatar

Dissolving Illusions by Suzanne Humphries MD is another excellent book on the history of vaccines that was excellent at convincing my MD husband.

Doug's avatar

Good for you. We were excommunicated from our grandkids over our refusal to get the jabs. This was back in '22. I wonder if the reaction would be the same 4 years later, with all of the info that's come out since then. But the daughter and son-in-law can never admit they may have been mistaken, so the ban continues.

VelvetStitching's avatar

I'm so sorry, Doug. What a loss not only for your children, but for your grandchildren! I will be lifting your family in prayer! May God restore your communication and relationship!

Covid nonsense divided so many! And if only people would have used common sense instead of relying on their fear instincts! Sigh. My heart breaks. Same story I hear often!

Doug's avatar

yes, it's no fun becoming a statistic... Thank you for your prayers!

SHug's avatar

So sorry to hear that Doug. I hope their hearts soften.

Doug's avatar

Thanks, SHug. I think pigs might learn to fly first, but I appreciate the sentiment.

Ruth's avatar

Doug, I understand the pain as I was also denied being able to see the grandsons. There has been a little softening as I now get an occasional text, but due to living several states away, have not seen them since 2017. At the time I told my son he was being disrespectful. Deep down I know he knows it, but the liberalism his wife and he share prevent him from ever admitting they could be a tiny bit wrong. It is hard, but I have to continually pray.

Doug's avatar

Ruth, thanks for sharing. The family here is my wife's, from a previous marriage - I have no offspring of my own. This was my one chance to play Grandpa, and it was taken away after I'd already fallen in love with these two wonderful kids. They were even referring to me as Grandpa, which really kills me, knowing the ex (their real grandpa) passed away last year. I think I got 100% of the blame for our stance against the jabs, even though my wife was totally in agreement with that decision.

I'm glad she at least has some minimal contact with her daughter, but it's a lot less than she deserves. There's a lot of layers to that interaction (as there is for every family situation), but my wife did a great job raising her daughter, considering the father was a narcissist and an abuser and an addict. A high-functioning addict, head of a local healthcare agency's psychology department with a great income that he mostly spent on indulging himself. The daughter is unaware of the addiction stuff, but was subject to the fighting and bickering and watching him try to gaslight her mom through 21 years of marriage. I get why she has issues, but she has taken them out on her mom unfairly.

But of course I would say that...

Doug's avatar

All my best to you.

Mike Gustine's avatar

A good friend of mine was told by his parents that he was a threat to them because he wouldn't get the shot. They were sitting in a restaurant at the time surrounded by people eating (even though the restaurant had followed the protocols by spacing tables farther apart and putting partitions on top of the backs of booths). He flipped out on them. Luckily, they apologized to him a while after and they are still close, but I saw how things could go back then.

Doug's avatar

My dad and stepmom tried to make a visit from us contingent on getting jabbed. When I told them they'd never see us again under those circumstances, they relaxed. I told them we'd be fine with doing a nose swab test before coming to visit. We only had to do that once. We see them 3 times a year.

Maggie Think of Me's avatar

That is horrible. We experienced the same but their rules were relaxed by the time their twins were 4 months old. Thankfully! A year later when we traveled to visit or son in law texted that we should wear a mask on the journey... We refused and were not asked again.

Doug's avatar

Good for you, Maggie! The masking thing is such a joke...

Allreighty's avatar

Same here. She is a nurse and he is a tech who vaccinates for his retail pharmacy. The only grace I can offer is that their employers have no incentive to mention adverse indications.

Susan Seas's avatar

This is how I felt with my granddaughter. She will soon be turning three. I have been praying since before she was born that she would be protected from her parents, medical opinions. 😭

Laura Kasner's avatar

Nancy - I may have asked you this before, but will she be open to watching Del Bigtree’s film, An Inconvenient Study?

https://www.aisstudy.com/

Nancy Benedict's avatar

Hey Laura, thanks. No, you didn't ask before, but this is intriguing. I'll pray about it. I'm just trying to stay in good communication.

Laura Kasner's avatar

🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻

I wrote about my efforts to share this film:

https://laurakasner.substack.com/p/planting-seeds

TDawg's avatar

It’s so hard. I pray you’re successful. My niece has a son and is pregnant. She works in psychology so she’s drunk all the koolaid. She’ll be vaxxing the new one just like the other one. Nothing I say makes a difference.

Carol Brizzolara's avatar

Have her read the book Dissolving Illusions by Suzanne Humphries and Roman Bystrianyk. It was eye opening for me years ago. Dr. Humphries is a nephrologist and this book is incredible.

Joanie Higgs's avatar

It was available for free online at one point, but just now I can't find it.

SHug's avatar

Here you go Joanie. It's free at the Internet Archive

https://archive.org/details/dissolvingillusi0000hump

Joanie Higgs's avatar

Unfortunately, that link only gives a preview of the book.

Lori's avatar

Yes, send her Turtles All The Way Down and ask her to follow A Midwestern Doctor Substack.

PonyBoy's avatar

I am convinced that their yearly flu vaccines were responsible for shortening my two parents lives.

If you have had excellent health all of your life, there is absolutely no reason for taking any of their "so-called" vaccines.

And the simple fact that exists that "no" safety studies have ever been run on "vaccines" before being released is enough for me to encourage others to be extremely cautious of ever putting them in their own bodies.

Dee's avatar

I’m convinced that decades of yearly flu vaccines (and god knows what else they agreed to be jabbed with that they never mentioned) caused both of my parents to develop dementia at the same time.

mspring's avatar

Coming to the same conclusion. Yes, some of the diseases that they have vaccines for are serious and deadly, but (with the exception of events like black plague) affect a small part of the populations, and in this day, we have treatment options for most if not all of them. The vaccines come with their own baggage, some also life threatening, and widely quality of life threatening. The rest of it, vaccinating against childhood diseases we all got, survived, and, we are now learning, achieved important but unknown immunities from seems ill advised, particularly considering the apparent life and quality of life issues with the vaccines. It will certainly be interesting to see the final reports from our secretary Kennedy.

Skeptical Actuary's avatar

The last highwire episode touched on the many benefits measles gives to people who have had it. A 20% lower rate of heart disease is one benefit.

Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

That's one thing in my favor, thanks.

LB (Little Birdie)'s avatar

Here is someone in the thick of the mRNA discovery and subsequent quitting/taking up the sword of truth to replace/remove the evil that created the Covid pandemic and its monster vaccine. Lies upon lies and he/his wife (both Drs) continue the quest to vanquish. I highly recommend following his Substack. The truth in writing/reading/telling is all important to overcome the Many Headed Serpent!

https://rwmalonemd.substack.com/p/champions-of-change-baton-rouge-how?r=2bsdyo&utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=web

Johnny-O's avatar

I haven't checked in on Yeadon in some time. He's now in the viruses don't exist camp eh?

Joanie Higgs's avatar

To my knowledge, he only said the "covid" virus didn't exist (which I agree with). I don't think he ever generalized that to "viruses don't exist".

Johnny-O's avatar

Thanks. I thought that seemed odd knowing what I do of him, but you never know.

Merry McIntyre's avatar

Show me the research that has identified a natural virus. The definition of vaccine was poison, venom until it was changed to suit the agenda. What the psychos call viruses are actually exosomes which individual cells excrete & are parasitic toxins. These exosomes are a very important function of the body to cleanse & detoxify. That is why cleanliness is next to godliness.

Bonnie Beresford's avatar

Many vaccines are effective and do save lives. But nothing that is invasive is utterly benign. Vaccines are supposed to go after and influence your entire immune system - which as we now know is a LOT bigger than we thought.

The use of vaccines is what's going bonkers now. They shove needles into newborn babes, who have NO functional immune system yet. That's why you vaccinate Mom, who feeds antibodies to the babe via her milk.

But the number of vaccines they give kids up to the age of 18 has vastly expanded since I was a kid in the 1950s. Do they work? Yes, they do make money for Big Pharma. Do they protect? Some of them do more harm than good. So it is RIGHT to question them .

Lori's avatar

Vaccines kill/maim. Safe and effective my arse. You are deluded.

Skeptical Actuary's avatar

We've got electron microscopes to see viruses. We've sequenced the DNA for a lot of them. We've got robust theories for how they spread a lot of diseases, and how immune systems defend against them.

The "no virus" people are clutching at tiny, broken straws.

Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

I just happened to read this Substack where AI had a conversation about viruses. Interestingly, it insisted that "viruses are fictional". The info presented is rather deep, but involves a logical fallacy involving scientific proof.

https://beyondcertainty.substack.com/p/google-ai-viruses-are-fictional?r=1657tz&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=email

Dave aka Geezermann's avatar

That may be, but it does not justify the mass use of so-called vaccines foisted on the public whose own immune systems do more to protect them than any shot. In my opinion, those who say there is no proof that viruses exist may have good evidence and should not be ignored.

Susan Daniels's avatar

So, when are Obama and the fifty-one signers of the letter denying the existence of Hunter's laptop going to be arrested for the federal interference in an election?

RJ Rambler's avatar

Coming. They are quietly circling and gathering Intel.

Lydia Lozano's avatar

Did Biden pardon Obama? Was BO's name on that long list of pardons?

RunningLogic's avatar

I don’t think so 🤔

Crash Pile's avatar

Since BO proxies ran the auto-pen for FJB, it was probably slipped onto a list. The pardon list with his name will eventually be found by Susan Daniels, unless of course he needs to rely on it beforehand. Let’s hope Susan doesn’t have to do the detective work on his auto-pardon, too, since that means he’s escaped the indictment process.

Marcia Beauchamp's avatar

Just to note: body-mind centering pioneer Bonnie Bainbridge Cohen, has been teaching about the “transitional fluid” or interstitial layer of human anatomy for 50 years. That the mainstream medical community just announced its “discovery” is laughable… if it weren’t so tone-deaf and uninformed.

FlatEarthFlyer's avatar

And they found it studying “Migrating tattoo ink”? So, it looks like YHWH’s commandment not to tattoo our bodies was smarter than any dumb human ever gave Him credit for. Same with the dietary laws. Everything we eat contains DNA, which survives digestion and is assimilated into our own DNA. In some cases, it actually resides in our DNA as a microchimera. Same principle with sexual fornication. Wow, who’da ever thought God’s prohibitions against eating unclean animals, tattooing ourselves, and having multiple sexual partners might actually have been based in science?! God’s not an idiot. But scientists and theologians sure are.

SHug's avatar

I keep thinking about Sodom & Gomorrah and the horrible STDs (some permanent) young adults are catching during their "Spring Break" hook ups. Even SYPHILIS, which I thought had been mostly wiped out in the US! https://youtu.be/JPOnUAM3DDo?si=tL4qdku94xmELQGd

They treat sex like just a sport instead of an intimate act between 2 people.

One guy tested positive for EVERY STD they tested for!!! How many women has he infected??? https://youtu.be/OlfTu-A8a0Q?si=EkqRs4HD10OLOjxq

YourGalapagosGullfriend's avatar

Cheap sex that infects the participants is a great boon for the Medical Industrial Complex.

RunningLogic's avatar

Yup birth control pills, abortion pills and STI/STD treatments 😕

SD Scott's avatar

🤮

Romans 1

Mike Gustine's avatar

Ugh, that's horrible. I was swept up by our hedonistic society growing up in the late 70's and early 80's and thought of myself as an atheist and free love person in the 90's. But I was so scared of AIDS and other STD's that my sexual promiscuity was virtually non-existent (which I saw as a failing of myself, as ridiculous as that sounds now). Thank God for that. I suspect he was guiding me as much as he could even back then, because I never caught any STD's and I only had a couple of sexual partners, one of which was my son's mother and the other I am with for life now. I had wanted to be a rock star as a way to have lots of women, and I feel fortunate that didn't happen either as I've seen what can happen to young people that find fame that way. Anyway, by the grace of God I'm still here and in much better shape than I was back then, spiritually at least.

Bonnie Beresford's avatar

NO - someone else's DNA IS NOT assimilated into our own as a "micro-chimera" What an insane idea!

Intact DNA carries information. When you eat it, that information is destroyed. The molecules remain and they feed your own flesh, but they do not and CANNOT form a "microchimera" that changes YOU.

There are idiots, yes. Best way not to be an idiot? Learn actual science, not fairy tales and superstitions.

FlatEarthFlyer's avatar

Modern science is far from omniscient when it comes to the human genome and microchimerism. In terms of DNA assimilation, some DNA does survive the human digestive process and can be “incorporated” into the human body, as noted here: https://www.nature.com/articles/news.2010.169. Additionally, the science of epigenetics has long asserted that food can affect your genes, as noted here: https://www.scientificamerican.com/custom-media/science-for-life/how-diet-can-change-your-dna/. Ad hominem insults never improve one’s argument…

Merry McIntyre's avatar

In my chiropractic education we learned about the interstitium. A late friend of mine had a Buddha belly x 10 &, when I would hug him, his belly was as hard as a rock. That was odd because, if it was adipose tissue (fat) it would be soft & spongy. I did research & discovered that the hardness came from an interstitium that was overloaded with fluid. He wasn’t ‘fat’ in any other part of his body, just his belly.

Karen Bandy's avatar

I worry about my brother, same hard gut, normal elsewhere.

My mother’s father had one too, weird though he lived into his 90’s and drank a lot, but finally died of damaged lungs from working in the shipyards during WW eleven. 😉

RunningLogic's avatar

WW eleven—ISWYDT 😆😁

Beckadee's avatar

I see what you did. lol

Beth M's avatar

I learned about the interstitium and interstial fluid in nursing school in 2010. It is not a new concept.

Fish Whistle's avatar

Merry, where did you go to school for your chiropractic education?

Merry McIntyre's avatar

At Northwestern Health Sciences University in Bloomington MN.

KCrail's avatar

Yes agreed. Science is so far behind the ancients it’s almost funny. When the gadgets get good enough they can “discover” what we’ve known for ages.

CaliforniaLost's avatar

It is because the second generation to use the machines always turns the machine from an advisor to a decider. We are about to go through that with AI now.

LJ's avatar

I believe, correct me if I’m mistaken, that “A Midwestern Doctor” (excellent substack BTW) has written many articles implying if not outright stating such truths. And yes, it seems many naturopaths and functional medicine doctors are more aware of the whole body pathways and have been for decades. That the current research calls it by the term “interstitial” doesn’t mean that there has not been awareness. Perhaps, however, I might suggest that term (interstitial) is better physiologically than other terms bandied about amongst odd spiritual practitioners.

Mike Gustine's avatar

The Chinese knew about it thousands of years ago.

Monica Dubay's avatar

Um I think the Asians discovered it more than 5000 years ago. It’s called chi.

nancy barker's avatar

According to Fauci, the science is settled!

Laura's avatar

Marcia, thank you for the info on Bonnie, I subscribe to her YouTube channel. Very interesting.

John Pullen's avatar

There are many people in this country that have suffered an aesthetic injury as a result of seeing the hideous new BHO Presidential Library in Chicago. Perhaps we need to sue to demand its demolition??

David Roberts's avatar

You know… this is not a crazy idea. Assuming it would get immediately bounced as being laughable, one could then take that decision to the reflecting pool court as precedent.

Tom's avatar

"I was aesthetically hurt . . . in my interstitium."

shayne's avatar

"The scholars are not worried the study will be rigged. They are worried it won’t be." That's the truth-bomb of the century! 😉

Teresa Parmenter's avatar

Do these people have nothing better to do?!? My goodness. I love the blue pool. God Bless us all 🙏🏻🇺🇸♥️

Cailin63's avatar

Agree! Blue is psychologically serene. Appreciate the pool is being cleaned as well.

NancyP's avatar

C & C, the gift that’s why keeps on giving truth, humor, and hope!! Thank you, Jeff

Harp Peg's avatar

Lots of laughs with the finale of Hakeem Jeffries making my day more joyful with out-loud laughter!

Dr Jen | Syringa Wellness's avatar

"Researchers studying tattoo ink migration in the body found that fluid‑filled “interstitial spaces” throughout the body’s connective tissue were not just isolated pockets as they’d supposed, but were in fact one continuous network. They are calling it “the interstitium.” "

I remember the good ol' days when we were told that it stays in the injection site, in the arm. 👀

Susan Seas's avatar

Oh boy, would I love to share that study of tattoo ink, migration! 😂🥴

Doug's avatar

Let's not forget how Gavin Newsom managed in a few days to clear San Francisco's streets of homeless preceding a visit from Xi Jinping. So it's possible to do when there's sufficient motivation.

The fact that that motivation was in the form of the leader of the Chinese Communist Party speaks volumes to me. California's "leaders" are bought off by foreign interests, and it shows. Prosecute the lot of them.

RJ Rambler's avatar

Let's make shooting or hanging for treason and murder great again. MSaHGA

Belling the Cat's avatar

I see I'm a moderate, only wanting to see broad and sweeping return of tar & feathering for douchebag officials, with a side of running out of town on a rail. Public stocks & pillories are likely to be useful adjuncts.

FlatEarthFlyer's avatar

Tarring and feathering is disfiguring and far more painful, and for a lot longer, than death by firing squad or hanging. I’m with you…

Belling the Cat's avatar

Sometimes I like to bring that point up; sometimes it's subtext. Mainly we need to root out more than the textbook traitors, with convincing lessons that effectively discourage repeat and/or copycat offenses.

Doug's avatar

Stocks, tarring, feathering - all could make America great again... Any kind of public humiliation. Hell, I'd just like 15 minutes of throwing tomatoes at them!

(Ooh... New video game idea!!)

shayne's avatar

I'm with you, RJR

KBB's avatar

Isn't it odd that even after all this time, we've never been told where he relocated all those homeless addicts to? Anybody know?

RJ Rambler's avatar

Ask anyone on the street.

Doug's avatar

Nah, they were back a week after Xi left, flopped on sidewalks and pooping in doorways again...

Jeffrey N. Gratton's avatar

No, every democrat is not thinking about Eileen Wang ... most are too submerged in TDS. They're literally killing their own intelligence.

Reelin’ In The Fears's avatar

Assuming there was much intelligence there to kill in the first place.

Politico Phil's avatar

Define "intelligence".

Politico Phil's avatar

Perhaps it includes the ability to hate that which ought to be hated. I can think of a few things that God says He hates.

Jeffrey N. Gratton's avatar

God may hate THINGS but he never hates people

Politico Phil's avatar

Things? Mountains? Automobiles? Cell phones? This makes no sense to me. So no one is condemned to hell?

Jeffrey N. Gratton's avatar

'Hell' ... Is an invention of the human mind. We create it through our thinking and actions.

A Loving Father God would NEVER create such a demonic concept for His Beloved Children

Dr Linda's avatar

I am excited about RFK Jr’s work. Who knows, maybe some vaccines have improved health.

All that aside, it would be great to know.

wily_coyote-genius's avatar

Consider watching “An inconvenient Study” by Del Bigtree.

Proberta's avatar

EVERY PARENT SHOULD WATCH 'An Inconvenient Study'!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u06YE5TIoWk

wily_coyote-genius's avatar

Thanks, @Proberta for posting the link. I agree, EVERY PARENT should watch this, but didn’t want to be forceful. Every parent and to be parents might consider reading one of many good books: Turtles all the way down, Dissolving illusions, Unavoidably unsafe: reconsidering childhood vaccines, Dr. Paul Mason’s new book: vaccine friendly plan, (Although I have not read the last one, yet)

BBS's avatar

The NYT and the people who read and believe the NYT are equally destructive to our country.