Laura Loomer
@LauraLoomer
JUST IN:
Less than one day after I reported @JoeBiden
had a medical emergency on Air Force One yesterday (and he did and his opposition in the Democrat Party is aware of it too), it’s now being reported THIS MORNING that Joe Biden’s doctor met with a Parkinson’s Disease specialist at the White House.
I stand by all of my reporting and everyone who works for Joe Biden knows what I reported yesterday was true.
Media and @BidenHQ
now in full cover up mode.
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Quote
Laura Loomer
@LauraLoomer
·
15h
Joe Biden is reportedly having a medical emergency on Air Force One right now.
Press access has been removed.
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Readers added context
Pres. Biden did NOT have a medical emergency on Air Force One following the Wisconsin rally and was perfectly fine throughout...and exited on his own after touching down in Delaware: x.com/ChrisDJackson/…
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9:15 AM · Jul 6, 2024
That is so much fun! I couldn’t stop watching, had to get tips for how hubby could build one, LOL. How neat that there’s a trick to open the door (dog) and even birds like it. I was a little worried about them....
Gunkanjima Island - Nagasaki, Japan .
Once the most densely populated place in the world, this island is now a ghost town.
FEW PLACES IN THE WORLD have a history as odd, or as poignant as Gunkanjima’s.
The tiny, fortress-like island lies just off the coast of Nagasaki. The island is ringed by a seawall, covered in tightly packed buildings, and entirely abandoned - a ghost town that has been completely uninhabited for more than forty years. In the early 1900s, Gunkanjima was developed by the Mitsubishi Corporation, which believed - correctly - that the island was sitting on a rich submarine coal deposit.
For almost the next hundred years, the mine grew deeper and longer, stretching out under the seabed to harvest the coal that was powering Japan’s industrial expansion.
By 1941, the island, less than one square kilometer in area, was producing 400,000 tonnes of coal per year.
And many of those working slavishly in the undersea mine were forced laborers from Korea.
Even more remarkable than the mine was the city that had grown up around it.
To accommodate the miners, ten-story apartment complexes were built up on the tiny rock - a high-rise maze linked together by courtyards, corridors, and stairs. There were schools, restaurants, and gaming houses, all encircled by the protective seawall.
The island became known as “Midori nashi Shima,” the island without green.
Amazingly, by the mid-1950s, it housed almost six thousand people, giving it the highest population density the world has ever known. And then the coal ran out.
Mitsubishi closed the mine, everyone left, and this island city was abandoned, left to revert back to nature.
The apartments began to crumble, and for the first time, in the barren courtyards, green things started to grow. Broken glass and old newspapers blew over the streets. The sea-breeze whistled through the windows.
Now, fifty years later, the island is exactly as it was just after Mitsubishi left. A ghost town in the middle of the sea.