4
WhyNoDonuts 4 points ago +5 / -1

This is the type of thing that makes us all dumber by association.

by pkvi
2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

5000 people moved to my small town in the last decade, house prices have doubled, and we are just getting out of that stage you’re describing.

by pkvi
2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

They have fired entire city police forces because of corruption, replaced them with military from outside, those guys are corrupt within a year.

If nobody is paid properly to protect people, nobody will.

by davebe
1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +2 / -1

Diversity of energy sources is always a good idea.

There are cold weather solutions to snow covered panels and frozen turbines, but they aren’t installed on warm-weather equipment. I’m North of 60 and they work just fine down to -30, except they are a part of a larger system, not the only thing that life depends on. Wood to heat part of the house and the battery room, an oil monitor for the large room and backup, and electricity too- partially powered by wind. We don’t have a solar array since the suns angle is low in the winter, but portable setups for the camper and such work fine. I’m thinking of a compressed air system for the winter since the panels are upright almost. If I can build up enough pounds of pressure with my excess energy that would work just right.

5
WhyNoDonuts 5 points ago +5 / -0

All of the Fonseca corporation that was laundering billions for politicians and celebrities

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

Everything you say “doesn’t work” right now in Texas, works fine in Alaska.

Wind power and solar aren’t great in the winter, but they can be made to work. At the temperatures you’re seeing the batteries won’t have a problem, but the summer 5w30 that most people run will turn to molasses and that’s why starting is a problem. If you have no spark that battery was almost dead anyways.

This is going to a be a problem for poor people. And young people. Some of them want to be prepared but don’t have the means.hell, even living in the city in this weather with no power will be the end, for some.

1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +1 / -0

They’re more worried about anyone seeing Hunters porn stash over there - stickied for 3 weeks, through inauguration and the impeachment attempt!

3
WhyNoDonuts 3 points ago +3 / -0

Too many mountains. Also, they have stocked bunkers for everyone. Mandatory military service plus you get to bring your assault weapon home. High education rate. Most secure nation on earth. They control the physical gold and are the bankers for the 1%. Attacking them would hurt all of the surrounding countries more.

No matter how much you hate them, they’re untouchable.

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

The counter-claim is that this is obstruction of justice. But nobody will care because it got taken down from the internet....so you would have to file a civil suit, etc. They’re just using the law against you, as always.

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

Is the “researcher” every doctor over the last fifty years, because sperm count and mobility has been dropping since the 60s.

by 4tmfw
1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +1 / -0

Looks like a lightning strike to me.

3
WhyNoDonuts 3 points ago +3 / -0

My personally belief is that there was a civilization that was wiped out with the last mud flood about twenty thousand years ago. Only a few North American Indian sites have been fully excavated, and when I say “fully” I mean that they actually look below the 5000 year old level to see if there is anything beneath.

Along the Alaska/Yukon border there are dig sites showing native settlements that are 13,000-14,000 years old, and while not being a modern society they prove that current archaeological beliefs of humans not grouping together until 5000 years ago to be false - yet when discovered in the 70s made the archaeologist an object of ridicule.

Now, if groups of Indians were living together almost 15,000 years ago, imagine what Asia or India may have been like back then.

4
WhyNoDonuts 4 points ago +4 / -0

They openly push the story that the London vaults are mostly allocated, but ignore the glut of silver sitting in JPM vaults in Manhattan (and jersey). One simple agreement will allow for some silver to move, no more squeeze.

There is nothing tying the physical silver to the markets, just notional. The shortage of coins isn’t considered a factor since there’s lots of paper to but. When a true “disconnect” happens, then the squeeze will be on.

1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +1 / -0

Receding hairline, not the front as much, but the sides of the forehead

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

100 years ago the labor required to live was higher. More physical exertion resulted in higher testosterone scores (with no plastic to bring it down). Women were just as sheltered and ignorant as today, but they likely did better in school than now- if they went at all. They just didn’t have the same type of pop culture, their social circles revolved around their communities and homes. But they were still quite uneducated, and doctors used to treat overemotional and “hysterical” woman as a specialty.

People were tougher, but many perished in the same stupid ways as today. Many more alcohol related deaths occurred, especially in cold places where an ejected patron might fall asleep in a snow bank. Bums lived a semi-rural life instead of congregating around urban drug houses. But really, an adult had the teaching of the church alone to guide them at that time, so their lives were directed by doctrine as opposed to thought, but this began to change with WW2

by BQnita
2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

Great theory! I just hope the whole country isn’t on meth.

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

Alex Jones pointed this out twenty years ago. He detailed who the founding companies were, traced their registrations back to known DARPA and CIA front companies

Who owned the first class A shares and all of their corporate bonds before 2000? They were still on the books before the US pension and private money started flowing in.

2
WhyNoDonuts 2 points ago +2 / -0

All 5 big earthquakes along the fault happened simultaneously, at exactly 7am west coast time. Nothing to see here.

7
WhyNoDonuts 7 points ago +7 / -0

It sounds like something similar to gout: for those who don’t know, Uric acid forms crystals that grow in the lowest parts of your body, and those tiny crystals literally cut you up from the inside.

Remember: the projected mortality rate for the vaccine is higher than the mortality rate for the average citizen with the virus. Complications are on top of that: face paralysis, loss of taste and smell, etc.

-2
WhyNoDonuts -2 points ago +1 / -3

There are less than half the number of planes in the air now compared to non-covi-restricted travel times, so it may be a factor. Also, shipping has been disturbed with lots of ships sitting at port waiting to unload. Lastly, fewer people are commuting regularly.

There is a significantly reduced amount of petroleum being used at the moment, which could have a cooling effect.

1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +1 / -0

Mushrooms are a big part of Japanese cuisine, and are often associated with cute things there.

Everyone should try to go to Japan, just to see how different it is. Hit Hawaii on the way back. Best America.

3
WhyNoDonuts 3 points ago +5 / -2

Plastic surgery leaves weakened structural pieces, and skin doesn’t fit over cartilage the same way. He has had multiple surgeries, is 80, has the healing ability of an 80 year old, and has a hectic schedule.

He won’t make it to the end of term, and the comment under this one is epically retarded.

by pkvi
1
WhyNoDonuts 1 point ago +1 / -0

Aaah. Whoops!

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