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An American Horror Story

Swat team
© AP
SWAT Team
Thomas Caldwell's wife awakened him in a panic at 5:30 a.m. on January 19. "The FBI is at the door and I'm not kidding," Sharon Caldwell told her husband.

Caldwell, 66, clad only in his underwear, went to see what was happening outside his Virginia farm. "There was a full SWAT team, armored vehicles with a battering ram, and people screaming at me," Caldwell told me during a lengthy phone interview on September 21. "People who looked like stormtroopers were pointing M4 weapons at me, covering me with red [laser] dots."

Agents demanded that Caldwell, a former lieutenant commander in the U.S. Navy who suffers from debilitating service-related spinal injuries, come outside and lay down in the grass.
"Someone grabbed my legs and dragged me through the grass. They threw me face down on the hood of the car, kicked my legs apart, put a chain around my waist and put me in handcuffs."
Caldwell said he looked up to see Sharon, his wife of 22 years, dressed in her nightgown holding her hands up with a sock in either hand. She, too, was covered in red dots from the weapons aimed at her. Sharon, 61, begged to put on her socks before they forced her outside in the cold.

"I said a prayer, 'Father, please don't let them kill my wife,'" Caldwell said through sobs.

Shopping Bag

Costco limits purchases of toilet paper, paper towels and bottled water amid inflation, supply-chain issues

Shopper/Costco
© Will West/Saul Loeb/AFP/Getty Images/KJN
Costco is implementing new consumer limitations on purchases of household essentials including toilet paper, paper towels, and Kirkland bottled water as the company has seen an increase in demand due to a surge in the delta variant and supply-chain complications.

Costco has been dealing with significant issues centered around supply-chain complications and inflation according to the company's Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Richard A. Galanti. Galanti informed analysts of the issues during a conference call, transcribed by Alpha Street, regarding Costco's fourth-quarter earnings on September 23:
From a supply chain perspective, the factors pressuring supply chains and inflation include port delays, container shortages, COVID disruptions, shortages on various components, raw materials and ingredients, labor cost pressures and trucker and driver shortages — trucks and driver shortages. Domestically, anecdotally rather from a — even on a domestic side, various major brands are requesting longer lead times. Some cases difficulty in finding drivers and trucks on short notice. Lead times on ingredients and packaging have been extended in some cases.
After noting complications regarding supply chains and inflation, Galanti announced,
"Also we're putting some limitations on key items like bath tissues, roll towels, Kirkland Signature water, high demand related SKUs related to the uptick in the Delta related demand."

Comment: When retail giants limit purchases...the worst is just around the corner.


Light Saber

Cyber Ninjas on Arizona election: "Based on these factual findings, the election should not be certified, and the reported results are not reliable."

cyber ninjas arizona audit maricopa
© Cyber Ninjas
On Friday September 24 CyberNinjas submitted to the AZ Senate a report (pdf) that read as follows:
"57,734 ballots with serious issues were identified in the audit. These issues include improper voter registration, improper votes, and discrepancies in the registration. This is a conservative estimate, as there were other identified problems that were not quantified nor included in that total, likely resulting in a much larger number of flawed ballots. Additional issues identified: backdated registrations, multiple voter registrations linked to the same voter affidavit, voters without records in a commercial database, and printing defects rendering thousands of ballots as suspicious.

"In the 2020 presidential election, the margin of victory was only 10,457 votes, a small fraction of the 57,734 ballots with known issues. Again, this is almost 6 times the margin of victory in the Presidential race and is multiples of the margin of victory in other races. Based on these factual findings, the election should not be certified, and the reported results are not reliable." — Cyber Ninjas' submitted Maricopa 9/24 Report

Comment: Presentation of the report starts at 23:00:



Stormtrooper

Jackboots: Police in Australia turn up on doorsteps to question private citizens over social media posts

australian police home visits social media
© TikTok
Australian police caught on camera harrassing private citizens in their homes
In footage that has to be seen to be believed, citizens in Australia are sharing with the world the moment police turn up at their door, warning them over their social media posts.

Police appear to be scanning social media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter and looking for users who they think may support protests.

"We're here to have a chat to you because we have instructions that you've been posting some things on social media," the plainclothes police officer said in a viral TikTok video.

Comment: The Australian police have morphed into what could be termed an occupying army. The actions they've taken in response to those protesting inhuman and unnecessary lockdowns are shocking in their brutality. : Matters have only deteriorated:








Bullseye

TX Gov. Abbott vows to hire Border Patrol agents punished by Biden administration

greg abbot texas governor
© REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File Photo
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott speaking at the annual National Rifle Association (NRA) convention in May 2018.
Governor Greg Abbott (R-TX), on this week's broadcast of Fox News Sunday, pledged to hire Border Patrol agents who were punished by the Biden administration for riding on horseback while blocking Haitian migrants.

Anchor Chris Wallace said, "A number of people have been — Democrats especially — have expressed outrage over those Border Patrol officers on horseback who were at the border and seemed to be trying to block Haitians pretty aggressively from coming across the border. Here was President Biden on all of that this week."

Comment: Heartening to see some governors have actually read the US Constitution.


Folder

2020 Election Improper Governmental Operations Report - Presented to Arizona senate and will be submitted to attorney general

AZ elections press conference
All evidence of fraud presented in the Arizona audit report on Friday will be referred to Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich.

We The People AZ Alliance drafted a report on Improper Governmental Operations of the Maricopa County Elections Department and Board of Supervisors and have presented it to the Arizona Senate to possibly be used today.

The Gateway Pundit has obtained a copy of this report which details statute and policy violations that occurred before, during, and after the 2020 election.

Comment: See also:


NPC

Harry & Meghan, Lizzo and more raise voices for vaccine equity at Global Citizen Live

Jennifer Lopez Coldplay Billie Eilish
© Getty Images; GC Images
Coldplay, Billie Eilish and Jennifer Lopez are among the performers scheduled to take the stage beginning at 4 p.m. on Central Park's Great Lawn in New York City.
"Get up, stand up" - for each other and for global vaccine equity.

That was the message delivered Saturday by celebrities, political leaders and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex during Global Citizen Live festivities on the Great Lawn on Central Park.

The event was the Big Apple's contribution to the international music festival to raise awareness for humanitarian causes, including the effort to deliver COVID-19 vaccines to poverty-stricken nations around the world.

Comment: Oh the inanity! The only thing missing from this woke celebrity cringe-fest is some vegan virtue signalling! Greta must have been busy.

See also:


Pistol

High school students accused of planning attack on Columbine anniversary

columbine high school
Four high school students in Pennsylvania have been accused of planning a school shooting in 2024, on the 25th anniversary of the Columbine shooting.

Lackawanna County District Attorney Mark Powell said Friday that two of the students, a 15-year-old boy and 15-year-old girl, have been charged as adults due to the nature of the alleged crimes, ABC27 News reported.

The female teen is charged with possessing weapons of mass destruction, terroristic threats, aggravated assault and criminal conspiracy. The male teen is charged with possessing weapons of mass destruction, possessing explosive materials, criminal conspiracy, terroristic threats, criminal conspiracy and aggravated assault.

Comment: See also:


Stormtrooper

'Living in a parallel universe': Australian PM boasts of Aussies' love of freedom to UN as police crackdown continues at home

Scott Morrison
© Wikipedia and Reuters / James Ross
Scott Morrison, seen alongside a police officer at an anti-vaccine mandate rally in Melbourne, Australia, September 22, 2021
A viral video has contrasted Prime Minister Scott Morrison telling the UN General Assembly that Australia believes in "freedom" and the "dignity of all people" with Australian cops beating citizens for not wearing masks.

In a virtual address to the UN General Assembly on Friday, Morrison talked up Australia's belief in "a world order that favors freedom," in "respecting the rights and freedoms of the individual" and "in the inherent dignity of all people... no matter the circumstances."

Morrison had barely spoken before Australian libertarian activist Randall Evans put together a video showcasing the Aussie PM's lofty words alongside footage of ordinary Australians being brutalized by police for breaching the country's draconian coronavirus restrictions.


Visuals of a young woman choked out by a police officer for not wearing a face mask, and a couple wrestled to the ground by cops for going unmasked on a beach, didn't seem to align too well with the politician's message to the world.

Comment: See also:


Syringe

COVID-19 vaccine boosters could mean billions for drugmakers

Pfizer facility
© Pfizer via AP
In this March 2021 photo provided by Pfizer, a technician works on a line for packaging preparation for the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at the company's facility in Puurs, Belgium. Billions more in profits are at stake for some vaccine makers as the U.S. moves toward dispensing COVID-19 booster shots to shore up Americans' protection against the virus.
Billions more in profits are at stake for some vaccine makers as the U.S. moves toward dispensing COVID-19 booster shots to shore up Americans' protection against the virus.

How much the manufacturers stand to gain depends on how big the rollout proves to be.

Exactly who should get a booster was a contentious decision as advisers to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention spent two days this week poring over the evidence. CDC director Dr. RochelleWalensky endorsed most of their choices: People 65 and older, nursing home residents and those ages 50 to 64 who have chronic health problems such as diabetes should be offered one once they're six months past their last Pfizer dose. Those 18 and older with health problems can decide for themselves if they want a booster.

Still, the crisis is constantly evolving, and some top U.S. health officials expect boosters will be more broadly authorized in the coming weeks or months. And that, plus continued growth in initial vaccinations, could mean a huge gain in sales and profits for Pfizer and Moderna in particular.

"The opportunity quite frankly is reflective of the billions of people around the world who would need a vaccination and a boost," Jefferies analyst Michael Yee said.

Comment: See also: