Posted on 08/31/2021 12:00:43 AM PDT by weston




spunky is this in your neck of the woods?
what do the different colors signify?
What did he do today? Stay in bed after his shot?
Thank you. I wondered that myself.
Love President Trump!
thanks for the report!
Terry McAuliffe: "Tonight, I have the leading conservative in America here, Bill Kristol, who has endorsed my campaign for governor." pic.twitter.com/N8e1eznV8D— Greg Price (@greg_price11) September 28, 2021
👍👍
“the leading conservative in America here, Bill Kristol,”
🤣😂😚🙂🤣😂
In testimony on Capitol Hill on Tuesday, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin and Generals Mark Milley and Kenneth McKenzie told Congress that Joe Biden was informed that the generals recommended that the US keep 2,500 troops in Afghanistan to see to the withdrawal and subsequent events. Biden has previously denied this. The three knew of Biden’s denial but said the opposite, basically calling Biden a liar. This is an interesting play on the part of Austin and the generals.
https://www.drewberquist.com/2021/09/breaking-bombshell-secdef-and-two-generals-call-biden-a-liar/
They had a similar stage setup for the Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate a couple of weeks ago.
WhereTH is this FAKE WH set??!
I JUST posted, yesterday, how fake this entire poser regime is....that everything is straight outta Hollyweird (just like his retractable shot likely was)....and, now we see this.
Great question. Where is this? And, why aren’t reporters saying anything about these studio “sets”?
Reminds me of the pics, that were posted soon after the “inauguration”, of him.
I know Bye-done met with Joe Manchin to bribe him to support the spending bill but Joe said Sorry Charlie ain’t gonna do it.
Other than that who knows.
Isn’t that a hoot?
More like scraping the bottom of the barrel.
It’s All Theater: Joe Biden Staged COVID Booster On Mockup Set Complete With Fake Outdoor Background
But...why? Even Stephen Colbert ridiculed the weirdness!
Fake background speaks to a wider pattern of lying, deceit, and fraud from Biden administration.
Biden had delivered a speech about boosters at South Court Auditorium of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building before stepping away from the podium to sit near a White House backdrop complete with backlit fake windows showing the White House in the background.
Many on social media were curious as to why the elaborate fake White House stage was necessary for Biden’s booster photo-op, especially when he could have just taken it at the actual White House next door, perhaps at the Rose Garden or Oval Office.
Biden’s use of a soundstage for his booster shot stunt is indisputable.
Even late night host Stephen Colbert mocked Biden’s obvious fake set but insisted it doesn’t “matter at all,” move along.
“I understand he was doing this on camera to encourage everyone to get the shot and that’s a good thing,” Colbert said Monday night. “But all I could see was what looked like incredibly fake windows behind the president. It’s a fake room!
“I understand he was doing this on camera to encourage everyone to get the shot and that’s a good thing,” Colbert said Monday night. “But all I could see was what looked like incredibly fake windows behind the president. It’s a fake room!
An Industry Insider Just Revealed The Truth About What Is Really Behind The Shortages At Our Local Supermarkets
Economic Collapse Blog ^ | 9/26/21 | Michael Snyder
The supply chain crisis that our supermarkets are facing is far worse than the mainstream media has been telling us. The mainstream media keeps trying to put a happy face on the “temporary” shortages, but an industry insider has let me know what is really going on behind the scenes. This particular insider runs a grocery store in Maine, and he says that things are as bad as he has ever seen. In fact, he says that he has “never seen anything close to what is happening now”. The email that he sent me the other day greatly alarmed me, and I asked him if I could share it with all of you. He gave me permission to do so, as long as I didn’t use his name. I haven’t received an email this startling in a long time. As you read this email, I think that you will quickly understand why I am saying that…
I’m self employed for 25 years, now, independent IGA affiliated grocery store in coastal Maine.
Supply issues are real! My supplier has limited us on orders for about a month now (limited the physical number of cases we can order)
Their issue is/was mainly the help crisis in their warehouse … order pickers and truck drivers. Same story everywhere, I know. Many of the items your reader commented about in this article are the same here … very limited gatorade, and gallon water is sketchy at best. Sometimes we get it, sometimes we don’t. I’ve not seen many supply issues in produce, rather poor quality issues there. Much more than normal. Deli / bakery … yes, lots of out of stocks and “long term unavailable” as my supplier likes to word it on the invoice.
In the center store – dry grocery … like others are saying, tons of out of stocks.
Meat supply is “fair” but pricing is extremely high. Shockingly high to me. The middle class is slowly being destroyed with these prices hikes … death by 1000 cuts of sorts, I guess.
My Frito Lay delivery person tells me that he is getting 55-60% of what he’s ordering. My last Nabisco order had 30% out of stocks. Over the years, we always get 99-100% of what was ordered. Pepperidge Farm Cookies … he tells me some weeks he’s only getting HALF of what he orders. These folks all work on commission …. if they don’t (or can’t) sell it to me … they don’t get paid. Or get paid less. When we place our liquor order (twice a week) out of stocks there are running 30% most orders. This commodity was ALWAYS 99.5 to 100% fill rate over the years …. always.
It’s frustrating. As I said … self employed 25 years, and worked for Kroger for 25 years before that … so 50-51 years in this business.
Never seen anything close to what is happening now. Add to that — a far left governor, and both houses here in Maine democrat controlled …. I just know we are on the verge of another mask mandate, and a lock down of sorts would not surprise me again as we move into the colder months. As you’ve seen I’m sure, Maine is in the news with COVID case surges (so they say)
I come to work every day just holding my breath for what is next … for our business and the 35 people I employ here in Maine.
This industry insider is trying to order normal quantities, but his suppliers are often unable to completely fulfill them.
As you can see from the email, the shortages are widespread, and this is the worst that they have been during the entire pandemic so far.
If there is something that you need to stock up on, I would grab it if it is still on the shelves, because pretty soon it may be completely gone.
On Friday I went to the grocery store and they were out of several things that I wanted to purchase. Unfortunately, we continue to get more confirmations that this is going to become the “new normal”.
For example, according to Bloomberg meat reserves in this country have plunged to dangerously low levels…
A U.S. report Wednesday showed beef reserves down 7.7% from a year ago in August. Poultry supplies slumped 20% and pork bellies, which are sliced into bacon, dropped 44% to the lowest levels since 2017.
In most cases supermarkets still have meat on the shelves, but it is definitely a lot more expensive than it used to be, and we are being told to brace ourselves for more price hikes in the months ahead.
Of course other types of retailers are facing severe supply shocks as well. A few days ago, another reader sent me an email in which he described what he is seeing at his local pharmacy…
The big issue, however, is at the local drug store; Rite Aid. The place is thin at best and stripped in some areas (last week there was no Zinc available). The beer cases are notably sparse. The main issue, however, is at the pharmacy. Six or eight months ago you could walk in and have your prescription filled inside of 20 minutes. If you called in the prescription the day before it was waiting for you. Not so any more. Yesterday I went to pick up an RX for my wife that had been called in last week. Not only was it not ready but I had to wait an hour before it was filled. There were nine cars in the drive up queue. I opted to walk in and it was nearly as bad. The young woman that helped me was clearly not local with bicolor hair and a large, glaringly obvious, in your face, Baphomet symbol around her neck.
I had a chat with the manager on the way out and asked him what was up with the Pharmacy staffing. I hadn’t seen the regular pharmacist for a few months. He blamed it all on the city for not having any affordable housing (lame) and mentioned that Albertson’s pharmacy, Albertson’s and Ridley’s were all very short on help (true).
Right now, dozens and dozens of drugs are in short supply.
In fact, the official FDA drug shortage list has 149 entries on it right now.
That is the most that I have ever seen.
As shortages persist, retailers are going to start implementing more limits. Last week, we learned that Costco has already started to pull the trigger…
Costco on Thursday said it was reinstating limits on purchases of toilet paper, paper towels and bottled water.
They don’t call it “rationing”, but that is essentially what it is.
And we are also being told to expect significant price increases, because supply chain issues are causing costs to go through the roof…
Costco this week joined the long list of retailers sounding the alarm about escalating shipping prices and the accompanying supply chain issues. The warehouse retailer, which had a similar cautionary tone in May, was joined by athletic wear giant Nike and economic bellwethers FedEx and General Mills in discussing similar concerns.
The cost to ship containers overseas has soared in recent months. Getting a 40-foot container from Shanghai to New York cost about $2,000 a year and a half ago, just before the Covid pandemic. Now, it runs some $16,000, according to Bank of America.
I have been warning that rampant inflation and shortages were coming for a long time, but a lot of people didn’t want to believe me at first.
If you were one of those doubters, do you believe me now?
During the first half of this year, many economic optimists assured us that the U.S. economy would be “booming” by this point.
But instead our economic infrastructure is being shaken on a very basic level, and we are facing enormous price hikes and very painful shortages throughout the rest of this year and into next year.
Events have begun to slide out of control, and it certainly wouldn’t take too much to push us into a full-blown avalanche.
https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/3998884/posts
Isn’t it amazing how numbers can get twisted all over the place?
1.Main points
In England, between 2 January and 2 July 2021, there were 51,281 deaths involving coronavirus (COVID-19); 640 occurred in people who were fully vaccinated, which includes people who had been infected before they were vaccinated.
The risk of death involving COVID-19 was consistently lower for people who had received two vaccinations compared to one or no vaccination, as shown by the weekly age-standardised mortality rates (ASMRs) for deaths involving COVID-19.
“Breakthrough cases” are where infection has occurred in someone who is fully vaccinated, whereas we define a “breakthrough death” as a death involving COVID-19 that occurred in someone who had received both vaccine doses and had a first positive PCR test at least 14 days after the second vaccination dose; in total, there were 256 breakthrough deaths between 2 January and 2 July 2021.
61.1% of breakthrough deaths occurred in males, compared to 52.2% and 48.5% for other COVID-19 deaths and for non-COVID-19 deaths respectively; the median age of breakthrough deaths was 84, compared to 82 for other COVID-19 deaths and for non-COVID-19 deaths.
13.1% of breakthrough deaths occurred in people who were identified as likely to be immunocompromised from hospital episodes or causes of death, compared to 5.4% for other COVID-19 deaths.
See my next post
Well, you know, Presidents come and Presidents go, but the bureaucracy is forever. Little bit of job security for when the next administration gets here.
Unless it’s Trump.
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