Posted on 02/25/2023 9:28:27 AM PST by Texas Fossil
The forewoman of the Georgia grand jury tasked with probing allegations of interference in the 2020 elections by former President Donald Trump and his associates has a bonkers Pinterest account featuring multiple references to witchcraft and magic spells.
Multiple pins from a Pinterest board purportedly run by Emily Kohrs promoted literature about “Wicca, Witchcraft & Paganism,” in addition to several pins devoted to spell casting.
The revelation came after Trump, 76, took to his Truth Social platform Wednesday to accuse Kohrs of being involved in the “greatest Witch Hunt of all time” after the lead juror went on a bizarre media tour to cryptically discuss the panel’s findings.
In one pin from two years ago that features a pentagram — a symbol of modern occultism — Kohrs, 30, shared how witches can “protect themselves during their magic work” by casting a circle.
Another suggests that “beginner witches” get started by acquiring sea salt, rosemary, quartz and incense, among other things
(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...
I’m not sure it is a mistake to approach this at State Level.
It may be in AZ.
But imagine trying any case in DC?
No white man could ever have a fair trial in a DC Court. Fact.
Bkmk
In today’s world of meta data, there are records on almost all of us that tell what we think and say.
Those can be used as tools in jury selection.
If successful in getting the DOJ to act. Wouldn’t it be tried in the jurisdiction of the federal court that Arizona was in?
I doubt it.
This is not currently a federal case. This is NOT a normal Grand Jury.
This is what it has been called, a Legal Witch Hunt.
Well, that Jack Smith person looks like lunatic.
They are running short of “normal” people to harass President Trump, now they are digging up the “crazies.”
All of the #ComDem’s “useful idiots” are bat sh_t crazy.
You simply cannot make this stuff up.
And New York State wants to use people’s social media accounts to determine if they can own a weapon. It seems nobody checked this twit’s social media postings before putting her on a Grand Jury.
“It seems nobody checked this twit’s social media postings before putting her on a Grand Jury.”
Well, it may be that is exactly why they chose her. They want to create the most massive chaos possible.
Cloward Piven in action.
I haven’t heard whether or not anything has been decided on the attorneys’ petitions to quash this case because of her.
I can't see the prosecution deliberately picking a whacky doodle, someone who can't keep her mouth shut, and admitted she told her boyfriend about the court proceedings. Did the defense choose her because they knew she was nuts, and could destroy the prosecution's case?
Grand Jury, not Petit Jury, defense not involved.
I was not thinking in terms of winning a case in the trial.
This is not a normal Grand Jury. It was called to examine possible charges to make against President Trump.
From that perspective the most chaos they can create is what they want. So they can work up the local natives to a frenzy and then worry about the actual charges.
I’ve been through Atlanta many time. I have learned to avoid several areas. once I made the mistake of spending the night on the East side of Atlanta, so I would not be going through Atlanta facing the Sun in the morning. I stayed in Lithonia, very clean hotel in a large area of other hotels.
BUT, when we went to dinner at a nearby well know chain restaurant, I got a shock. All the staff was black, the waitress who waited on us clearly did not want me there. We ate and went straight back to the nearby hotel and did not leave the room until we left early the next morning. I’ve had that feeling before, when I was in a place that I could feel the resentment and hate.
Have traveled that route since then, but never stayed on East side of Atlanta again.
Please note, the link to Pinterest, it no longer goes to the posts of “the witch”. You get an error message saying the page cannot be found.
Surprise? Nope.
I was into the Civil War for many years, and traveled to most of the battlefields. I had planned to visit Atlanta to see the Cyclorama & Civil War Museum. Its original location was on Peach Tree something or other. Back then there was no such thing as GPS, so I relied on AAA triptiks to travel. I got off an exit to look for the street or road I needed, and the traffic was so obnoxious that I got right back on an exit ramp, and headed out of town. I’d driven in Washington, D.C., Boston, Philadelphia, and New York City without GPS, without any problems, but trying to find my way around a city where every other street or road was named Peach Tree, I gave up.
“trying to find my way around a city where every other street or road was named Peach Tree”
Much like Mulholland in SoCal.
I traveled for almost 40 years in the wholesale hardware distribution industry, in various capacities. At one point I covered 11 states. I never had a GPS.
But the places that are the hardest to navigate are where you have rivers and or streams and you have residential neighborhoods scattered in it.
Ft. Smith AR is one of those places. Only the locals can make it work.
Then there are those forgotten roads in Western Kansas where you can drive forever on dirt roads without a road sign, and no towns on the map.
Emily Kohrs, removed her Pinterest account, but traces of her witchcraft posts remain here:
First mention of witches in the Bible:
EXODUS 22:18 KJV
Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live.
There are a number of things the Bible treats as capital crimes that are necessarily even illegal in our society:
Murder (abortion), blasphemy (free speech), cursing or striking a parent, witchcraft, and kidnapping come to mind.
Of course the Bible also does not endorse taking the law into our own hands. And we are currently under the economy/dispensation of God’s superabounding grace by which even these sins can be forgiven.
But it is understandable and reasonable that early Christian settlers in America would form communities in which witchcraft was treated as a capital crime.
However, the term “witchhunt” comes from the willingness of some such Christian communities to accept unfounded accusations and punish people with little or no evidence of a crime.
It is quite ironic that a witch is leading the brigade of witchhunters in this particular case.
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