Thank you. It’s obvious to anyone who is even somewhat sane, and IQ 100 or above, and not evil.
The problem is the distruptor appears to have one motive only, to disrupt. And won’t stop. Meth? Can tweakers type?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOD8TNbWuNM
Body Language: FBI Christopher Wray, Wolf Or Sheepdog
26,726 views
Jul 10, 2020
Body Language Ghost
18 min
Trust Wray.
I think your onto something with the books. And honestly think the books may be adrenochrome. The products are the children and the books are the AC. Look at the books on here...a season in hell, a rose for virtue. We know what 🌹 are. Why choose these books of all books avail pic.twitter.com/Y6o4wb25i5— Ryan Norton (@SkipNorton13) July 11, 2020
The books include among others, the following.
Primary Colors about the Clinton Campaign;
The Kennedys in Hollywood
and
Astray by Emma Donohugh, a book of short stories.
Read the blurb from her home page:
The Lost Seed is a tragedy based on court records of sex crimes in seventeenth-century Massachusetts.
The Widows Cruse is inspired by a paragraph about a suddenly widowed woman, from a newspaper in 1730s New York.
The Hunt shortlisted for the 2012 Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Prize is about a teenage soldier who unwillingly participates in attacks on local women during the American War of Independence.
Vanitas is about a girl in 1830s Louisiana who probes her cousins mysterious death.
'Counting the Days' is based on the 1840s correspondence of two emigrants from Northern Ireland to Canada.
Last Supper at Browns follows a slave and his mistress who conspire to murder their master in Texas in 1864.
Onward is suggested by several letters of Charles Dickens about a family he helped to emigrate to Canada.
The Body Swap is a noir piece about the gang of forgers who tried to hold Lincolns corpse to ransom in 1876.
The Long Way Home is based on a rumour about a hard-drinking, cross-dressing eccentric in 1870s Arizona.
Man and Boy is addressed by zookeeper Matthew Scott to his lifelong companion, Jumbo the Elephant.
Snowblind is a fictional tale of two young men who become goldmining partners in the 1890s Klondike.
The Gift is inspired by letters to a New York adoption agency from the birth mother and adoptive father of a little girl.
'Daddy's Girl' is about the 1901 death of Murray Hall, a New York politico who turned out to be a woman.
'What Remains' imagines the old age of a sculptor couple, Frances Loring and Florence Wyle.
So we have sex crimes in 1600s Massachusetts, a teenage soldier attacking women during the Revolutionary War, the mysterious death of a Louisiana woman in 1830, a slave and his mistress killing their master, an 1870s crossdresser in Arizona (WTF?), two closeted queers in the 1890s Klondike ("Gay 90s" anyone?), the 1901 death of a tranny...
Yeah, nothing to see here.