Sunday, April 29, 2018
30/4 or the Fall of Saigon
By noon on March 16, a mass of humanity; troops, dependents and civilians was clogging the old road. Some 400,000 civilians, 60,000 ARVN, and 7,000 Rangers began the attempted escape to the sea.29
By the time that the last straggling men, women, and children had reached Tuy
Hoa on the coast;
300,000 civilians, 40,000 ARVN, and 6,300 Rangers were missing, never to be accounted for.
300,000 civilians, 40,000 ARVN, and 6,300 Rangers were missing, never to be accounted for.
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Vietnam Babylift, My Story |
141 Pictures Of The Vietnam War |
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‘Smallville’ Star Confesses She Sold Children To Rothschilds And Clintons
Via comment by Anonymous on Comment on Shakespeare Spoke Southern
‘Smallville’ star Allison Mack has confessed that she sold children to the Rothschilds and Clintons during her time in the child sex cult.
According to police, Allison Mack worked in a senior management position for the Hollywood pedophile cult NXIVM. As second-in-command, it was her job to lure children into the cult in order to sell them to elite Hollywood pedophiles and powerful politicians.
Thefreethoughtproject.com
reports: “As alleged in the indictment, Allison Mack recruited women to
join what was purported to be a female mentorship group that was, in
fact, created and led by Keith Raniere. The victims were then exploited,
both sexually and for their labor, to the defendants’ benefit,” U.S.
Attorney Richard P. Donoghue said in a statement.
‘Smallville’ star Allison Mack has confessed that she sold children to the Rothschilds and Clintons during her time in the child sex cult.
According to police, Allison Mack worked in a senior management position for the Hollywood pedophile cult NXIVM. As second-in-command, it was her job to lure children into the cult in order to sell them to elite Hollywood pedophiles and powerful politicians.
More @ Your News Wire
Comment on Shakespeare Spoke Southern
Comment by 4Branch on Shakespeare Spoke Southern
I am of the Low Country and familiar with the 'Gullah' of the Out Islands; Not heard much around Charleston any longer or Beaufort any longer. I am also familiar with the dulcet tones of a true Southern Lady and miss the fact that these are no longer heard as well. The Upcountry ne'er had quite the same style and class; the Cachet of the Piedmont or Low Country. A restless soul, I've lived in all regions of the Palmetto State.
Tidewater Virginny ain't a patch on Geechies!
Truly I do miss the Old South, the Black ladies all in white under the spread of an ancient Oak, in the yard of an AME Church on Sunday; gigging flounder on the flats of Charleston Harbor; sculling a pirogue up the Cumbahee at dusk, to hunt frogs, alligators, or what chance offers. Sittin' on the Hill at the Deer Camp, swillin' down venison stew, rice and onions an' tea, an' hot biscuits. Hound dogs at our feet, easy knowin' they got likkin's comin'. Talkin' dogs with men who know dogs, and learnin' what no book tells.
I do love my Texas, but my Lone Star State is fast wearin' away, under the scurryin' feet of so many
strangers, jabberin' their Noo Yawk talk, or Caliphoney blather. I know the Old Palmetto is no more, but at least I have my treasured memories, and in my mind's eye, I can see those old ladies, hummin' an old hymn as the lay the table for their dinner on the grounds. I smell that chicken an' biscuit from heah, sir!
I am of the Low Country and familiar with the 'Gullah' of the Out Islands; Not heard much around Charleston any longer or Beaufort any longer. I am also familiar with the dulcet tones of a true Southern Lady and miss the fact that these are no longer heard as well. The Upcountry ne'er had quite the same style and class; the Cachet of the Piedmont or Low Country. A restless soul, I've lived in all regions of the Palmetto State.
Tidewater Virginny ain't a patch on Geechies!
Truly I do miss the Old South, the Black ladies all in white under the spread of an ancient Oak, in the yard of an AME Church on Sunday; gigging flounder on the flats of Charleston Harbor; sculling a pirogue up the Cumbahee at dusk, to hunt frogs, alligators, or what chance offers. Sittin' on the Hill at the Deer Camp, swillin' down venison stew, rice and onions an' tea, an' hot biscuits. Hound dogs at our feet, easy knowin' they got likkin's comin'. Talkin' dogs with men who know dogs, and learnin' what no book tells.
I do love my Texas, but my Lone Star State is fast wearin' away, under the scurryin' feet of so many
strangers, jabberin' their Noo Yawk talk, or Caliphoney blather. I know the Old Palmetto is no more, but at least I have my treasured memories, and in my mind's eye, I can see those old ladies, hummin' an old hymn as the lay the table for their dinner on the grounds. I smell that chicken an' biscuit from heah, sir!
The one-trick pony: Inside Trump's negotiating style
President Trump tells people
he keeps the world guessing with his wild unpredictability. But those
who work most closely with him say he's a one-trick pony in
negotiations.
The trick:
Threaten the outrageous, ratchet up the tension, amplify it with tweets
and taunts, and then compromise on fairly conventional middle ground.
“His ultimate gamble is:
'You don’t have as big of stones as I do,'" a source close to Trump
told me. "'You’re going to feel too uncomfortable where I go. The stakes
are too high. This is too far outside your comfort zone.'"
More @ Axios
Saudi Crown Prince: Palestinians should take what the U.S. offers
In a closed-door meeting
with heads of Jewish organizations in New York on March 27th, Saudi
Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman (MBS) gave harsh criticism of
Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen), according to an Israeli
foreign ministry cable sent by a diplomat from the Israeli consulate in
New York, as well three sources — Israeli and American — who were
briefed about the meeting.
The bottom line of the
crown prince's criticism: Palestinian leadership needs to finally take
the proposals it gets from the U.S. or stop complaining.
According to my sources, the Saudi Crown Prince told the Jewish leaders:
More @ AXIOS
Shakespeare Spoke Southern
One of the cultural markers that has identified that which we call Southern from the undistinguished mass of American nonculture is language. Obviously pronunciation is involved here, but also words, idiom, usage, style. A few years ago there was a celebrated (and therefore naturally very stupid) series on PBS on the English language. According to this series the only distinctive aspect of English to be found in the South was the black Gullah dialect of the South Carolina coastal islands.
Otherwise, it seems, all Americans speak a general English —to illustrate where American English speech originated, they showed a picture of the home of U.S. Grant’s forebears in Ulster. The only mention of Southern speech was by the actual speakers who were interviewed, who kept pointing out speech differences that are common knowledge to every American but apparently not to the excruciatingly boring Canadian newsreader who was responsible for the program.
More @ The Abbeville Institute
A Plan To Get Flynn & Framing General Flynn for a Crime He Did Not Commit
Via David
4) Why would Page & Strzok be stressed about "THIS" potentially going off the rails if everything was by the book?
BECAUSE IT WASN'T!
It was a conspiracy to entrap @GenFlynn. All Strzok needed was an excuse to speak w Flynn. Everything in the 302 was likely fabricated
BECAUSE IT WASN'T!
It was a conspiracy to entrap @GenFlynn. All Strzok needed was an excuse to speak w Flynn. Everything in the 302 was likely fabricated
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1) Last night, more Strzok-Page Texts were released. There are some suspicious texts sent prior to the @GenFlynn interview. Were they talking about Flynn? I think so
Full Texts here:
Full Texts here:
More @ Thread Reader
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Steve Hilton: Trump’s triumphs are driving his critics crazy
It started with Kanye and ended with Kim, featuring
Emmanuel and Angela in between: this week showed President Trump
upending expectations and confounding his critics on an epic scale.
But perhaps the most revealing thing
about it all was not what it said about the president but instead the
light that it shined on the army of elitists arrayed against him – in
politics, the media and the foreign policy establishment. There’s
something truly instructive about their reactions to the developments of
the past few days.
More @ Fox
Clapper’s actions sure do look like political manipulations
Friday’s release of the House Intelligence Committee report generated much coverage over its finding of no evidence of collusion with the Russians. Receiving less attention was a small section entitled “Finding #44,” where the committee suggested that then-Director of National Intelligence (DNI) James Clapper leaked information from the so-called Steele dossier. Even worse for Clapper, the alleged leak was made to CNN, which later hired him as a contributor.
More @ The Hill