Adam Clark Curry was born in Arlington Virginia. According to his Wikipedia page: Curry is the nephew of former CIA official and United States Ambassador to Korea, Donald Gregg, whom he calls “Uncle Don” in his podcast.
On Uncle Don’s page: Gregg’s father was Abel J. Gregg of Washington, the national secretary of boys’ work of the Young Men’s Christian Association. His wife was Margaret Curry.
Their daughter Lucy Steuart Gregg married the writer Christopher Buckley, the son of conservative journalist and author William F. Buckley Jr. His CIA job was to fuck around in both of the Koreas.
They admit Donald’s boss was Ted Shackley, deputy director of covert operations. Adam worked as a tech entrepreneur.
John Dvorak graduated from spook center Berkeley. He has a famous Uncle Captain August Dvorak, who made the Dvorak keyboard.
August joined the army, got wounded, discharged and joined the navy where he taught mathematics, and then enlisted to help bring troops home during WWI
August Dvorak wound up working as an educational psychologist and professor of the University of Washington in Seattle
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🧵👇The now ubiquitous term Semitic was officially coined in 1781 by August von Schlözer, a spooky clergyman who worked in trade and wrote on Phoenicians.
It’s explained to be derived from the Biblical name Shem, whose name means “name”. However, that explanation is garbage on multiple levels. en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?ti…
Shem is an arbitrary minor character, of no special importance to the Bible, or to the regions & languages of the Middle East in general.
1/15: According to a YouGov poll, 71% of Brits believed that lockdowns were either appropriate or not strict enough, compared to only 19% who believed that they were too strict. In the 18-24 age group, 78% believed that the lockdowns were appropriate or not strict enough.
2/15: Paul Watson produced a video on Infowars about the YouGov poll. He accused young people of being "bootlickers" for supporting the lockdowns. However, he didn't question the data. infowars.com/posts/govern-m…
3/15: When we look into YouGov, the company that conducted the poll, we see that it is a polling company from London, and the people behind it are suspicious.
🧵👇Some things you may not know about the Derek Chauvin trial
Chauvin tried to plead guilty to 3rd degree murder, but we are told US Attorney General Bill Barr wouldn't accept that plea. Ridiculous, because the US Attorney General had nothing to do with accepting that plea or not. This is just legal storytelling for the unwashed.
Chauvin was tried by the State of Minnesota, not by the Feds. That's why they call it State of Minnesota v. Derek Chauvin. Even if this had been tried in federal court, the plea would be accepted by prosecutors in the case, not by the Attorney General. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_v._…
🧵👇Some of you may have seen the video of the black student stomping his teacher for taking away his Nintendo, but I wonder how many have seen through it. The first thing to consider is that if this were real, they would never release such shocking video.
Back in the old days you never saw stuff like this, and that is because it wasn't allowed. This video is crime scene evidence, or should be, so the police and court should be sitting on it at least until after the trial. They don't want to ruin jury selection, you know.
And besides, releasing all crime scene footage used to be a no-no, since of course it traumatizes the public for no reason. Except that they now have a reason. They WANT you traumatized, which is why all this stuff is posted immediately.
The woman depicted in the statue was at the end of a momentous two weeks. She had given birth to her twelfth child. A week later they were kidnapped by Indians and she was forced to walk a hundred miles through the wilds of New England in the winter, wearing one shoe.
During the march her baby was murdered. But Hannah had her revenge when she, with the help of two others, got the drop on her Indian captors, slaying and scalping ten of them. They then stole a canoe and floated down the river back to town.
🧵👇They tell us Karen Carpenter died of anorexia, and most people assume she starved to death. She didn't, and they admit that in the mainstream bios. She had just gotten out of treatment where she had gained 30 pounds.
Only three weeks before her alleged death, she made her last public appearance (January 11, note the date), and she was not super thin. On her Wikipedia page, they admit her friend Dione Warwick was quoted as saying that Karen was bragging about “having an ass”.
Even her autopsy report (which is faked) admits she weighed 108 pounds. That is thin for someone 5'4”, but it isn't considered to be anorexic. Many normal healthy people live at that weight.