I say the French do some of the most entertaining fake street brawls.

Note at :16 where the guy in the red shirt gives a quick nod to tank-top boy to signal their choreographed “fight”. Note after getting nice and squared up for the camera.
About :27 where white shirt protestor bar arms an opposing protester (who has cleverly disguised himself with a neon yellow vest) and manages to slightly knock him off balance.
That is not nearly as disturbing as the following attack that occurs to neon-boy when a tall protestor in a black mask attacks him viciously with a … flag
The best fight imo occurs at :44 when a short pudgy bald guy – clearly upset at his lack of camera time – faces off against tall black mask protestor.
It looks like black-mask protestor is about to own pudgy guy except that the fight, sadly, gets broken up by a tall viking wearing a striped jump suit and carrying a drum (I think). I’m not kidding…

Who needs tee-vee when you’ve got this shit?

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More from @MrGoldstein7

18 Sep
Ignatius Donnelly was selling the Bacon-as-Shakespeare theory in his book The Great Cryptogram. His opening chapters, showing that Shakespeare could not have written the plays, are completely convincing. And true. However, it turns out Donnelly was also a spook Image
I assume he was from the same families. His genealogy is scrubbed past his parents, with no grandparents listed, which is strange for a US Congressman from Minnesota and Lieutenant Governor from just over a century ago. Image
However, we find 67 Donnellys in the peerage, including Vice Admiral Sir Ross Donnelly, who became an admiral in 1838. His daughter married Baron Audley, whose grandmother was Susannah Robinson.
Read 162 tweets
18 Sep
We are told the Carpathia rescued 705 people from the Titanic, so at this point in the investigation we may guess that would be that was all that were ever onboard. Minus 212 crew, that would be 493 passengers, which sounds about right. Image
Since this was a managed event, either the passenger lists were faked, the crew list was faked, or both. The Carpathia list was probably also faked, since that ship was part of the hoax. It may have picked up more than 705 [or none].
The Titanic lists could be padded in several ways, which we have seen in more recent hoaxes. They could include people that had recently died from other causes, so we should look for a preponderance of elderly onboard.
Read 262 tweets
17 Sep
The Titanic: the Fraud that Keeps on Giving

This famous maiden voyage of the world's most famous ship was strangely underbooked. The ship was at a little over half capacity, so it reminds us immediately of the planes that were said to have crashed on 911. Image
They were also about half empty. The Titanic could take 2,453 passengers, but only 1,317 were allegedly onboard. That's 53.7% capacity.
Also a red flag is the mainstream's pathetic attempt to explain this anomaly: there was a coal strike in the UK that spring, causing many crossings to be canceled.
Read 179 tweets
17 Sep
Lloyds of London was the major insurer of the Titanic, and also one of the largest insurers of the Twin Towers. Well, do you want to guess who insured the Hindenburg? Image
The Hindenburg was insured for $15 million, or about $285 million in today's dollars. Wikipedia tells us $80 million in today's dollars, but someone there can't do math. Here is the policy:
insurancejournal.com/news/east/2017… Image
Also like the Titanic and the airplanes on 911, the Hindenburg was mysteriously under-booked. There were (allegedly) 36 passengers and 61 crew aboard, though the ship could take more than double that. Strange, since this was the first transatlantic flight of the season.
Read 159 tweets
16 Sep
You might think Avatar or Avengers:Endgame was the most popular movie of all time, based on box office totals. Or that Gone with the Wind was the most popular of all time. But neither one is even close to being the truly most popular, based on number of tickets sold.
They want you to think Gone with the Wind is the most popular, because of course it was huge propaganda about the Civil War, selling mainstream history. As such, they promoted it far beyond anything at the time, leaving it in theaters for more than three years.
It came out in late 1939, but was still on the charts in 1942. It wasn't re-released in those years like Star Wars later was, it was just left in theaters the entire time.
Read 50 tweets
16 Sep
Saul and David, the first two Israelite kings, were both chosen by the LORD from among the people. It seems these kings were picked for their good looks: both are described as particularly handsome.
There also seems to be a very special relationship between king David, and Jonathan, son of the incumbent king Saul. At David’s first audience with Saul, Jonathan sort of falls in love with him, told with a word for soul, nephesh, (נפש), which also means “passion” or “desire”.
Read 56 tweets

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