Posted on 03/06/2020 1:39:35 PM PST by ransomnote
https://twitter.com/repkenbuck/status/1235944686910660609
Still hacking away at the rule of law...
https://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3822486/posts?page=1
Ruth Bader Ginsburg says first-trimester abortion is far-safer than childbirth while eviscerating controversial Louisiana bill
SSF; If the ladies can do the job, well and good, but Shell should avoid diversity for the sake of diversity.
A gender “Shell” game! If it keeps the board happy and rewards the shareholders then...
“Male, Female, we won’t tell!”
Whoever you are, we’re happy to sell!” :)
In with the list of alternate Q trackers.
I’ll bet they were just hoping nobody noticed so they could just re-use them in the Presidential election...
“far-safer than childbirth”
Safer to whom?
Only if one ignores what is done to the child.
Oh, right, like Coronavirus is safer for 30-year-olds than for... well, say, old ladies with long-term health issues, or even diabetic Latino women?
gisd O
Good nite! (Bedtime too!)
I just do a bit here and there... usually when I should be doing something else!
BTW this is good updates on the border wall, BeauBo is the best.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/3822474/posts?page=3#1
New border wall going up in San Luis (Yuma, Arizona)
A new section of border wall in going up on San Luis, Arizona (Southern edge of the City of Yuma, AZ). The area of new infrastructure is located just west of the port of entry.
The new stretch is expected to completed by the end of 2020, along with an additional 99 miles of new border wall in Yuma County. This is part of President Donald Trump’s promise to complete 400 to 450 miles along the entire southern border.
Oh, right, like Coronavirus is safer for 30-year-olds than for... well, say, old ladies with long-term health issues, or even diabetic Latino women?
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I like how you think....
So much winning!
Thank you, President Trump!
I looked up the etymologies a few days ago.
Corona = Crown
Virus = poison = (to kill with poisonous plants)
crowns try to kill U.S. with poisonous “plants” (Q said “plants” need water didn’t he?) and now we are being vaccinated to produce immunity against poisonous crowns.
Hmmm.
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corona (n.)
1650s, “a crown,” from Latin corona “a crown, a garland,” in ancient Rome especially “a crown or garland bestowed for distinguished military service,” from suffixed form of PIE root *sker- (2) “to turn, bend.”
With many extended senses in botany, anatomy, etc. A coronavirus (by 1969) is so called for the spikes that protrude from its membranes and resemble the tines of a crown or the corona of the sun. The two “crown” constellations, Corona Borealis (according to fable, the crown of Ariadne) and Corona Australis, are both Ptolemaic. Astronomical sense of “luminous circle observed around the sun during total eclipses” is from 1809. As a brand of Cuban cigar, 1876. The brand of Mexican pale lager beer dates from 1925.
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virus (n.)
late 14c., “poisonous substance,” from Latin virus “poison, sap of plants, slimy liquid, a potent juice,” from Proto-Italic *weis-o-(s-) “poison,” which is probably from a PIE root *ueis-, perhaps originallly meaning “to melt away, to flow,” used of foul or malodorous fluids, but with specialization in some languages to “poisonous fluid” (source also of Sanskrit visam “venom, poison,” visah “poisonous;” Avestan vish- “poison;” Latin viscum “sticky substance, birdlime;” Greek ios “poison,” ixos “mistletoe, birdlime;” Old Church Slavonic vinja “cherry;” Old Irish fi “poison;” Welsh gwy “poison”). The meaning “agent that causes infectious disease” is recorded by 1728 (in reference to venereal disease); the modern scientific use dates to the 1880s. The computer sense is from 1972.
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poison (n.)
c. 1200, “a deadly potion or substance,” also figuratively, from Old French poison, puison (12c., Modern French poison) “a drink,” especially a medical drink, later “a (magic) potion, poisonous drink” (14c.), from Latin potionem (nominative potio) “a drinking, a drink,” also “poisonous drink” (Cicero), from potare “to drink” (from PIE root *po(i)- “to drink”).
A doublet of potion. For similar form evolution from Latin to French, compare raison from rationem, trahison from traditionem. The Latin word also is the source of Old Spanish pozon, Italian pozione, Spanish pocion. The more usual Indo-European word for this is represented in English by virus. The Old English word was ator (see attercop) or lybb (cognate with Old Norse lyf “medicinal herbs;” see leaf (n.)). Slang sense of “alcoholic drink” first attested 1805, American English.
WWG1WGA
Il n'y a pas d'honte être français. Il y a seulement l'honte rester de français.
(There is no shame being French. There is only shame staying French.)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
Dear Everyone,
The reason South Korea has so many cases isnt that they prevented spread.
Its that they *detected* the spread.
They tested hundreds of thousands of people, including asymptomatic + mild cases.
Thats HOW you do it.
Their death rate (0.6%) is a better estimate— Jeremy Faust MD MS (@jeremyfaust) March 6, 2020
thanks for keeping us going...”Q” has gotta come through.
Just watched Dr.Campbell’s Friday report and he has over 7,000 comments.
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