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Eye 1

'Nazis' bearing tiki-torches, allegedly supporting Republican candidate in Virginia election, exposed as false-flag stunt by Democratic establishment


Comment: THIS is election meddling...


lincoln project false flag
© REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
A group dressed as white supremacists poses in front of Republican gubernatorial candidate Glenn Youngkin's campaign bus in Charlottesville, Virginia, October 29, 2021.
With the Virginia gubernatorial campaign down to the wire, Democrats pointed and shrieked at "Nazis" allegedly supporting their opponent in Charlottesville. The Lincoln Project then admitted to the false-flag stunt.

The election has gone from a sure thing for Democrat Terry McAuliffe to a possible upset by Republican Glenn Youngkin in recent weeks. On Friday, as Youngkin came to Charlottesville for the final campaign push, reporters were drawn to a group of people posing in front of his bus in pouring rain. All five wore hats, sunglasses, white shirts, khakis and tiki torches - in what seemed to be a reference to the 2017 'Unite the Right' rally that ended in violence.


Comment: It seems pretty obvious that this wasn't a 'demonstration,' despite trying to spin it as such after the stunt was exposed. They were trying to pull a fast one, and in their blatant hubris, thought they wouldn't get caught. But in the digital age, Twitter-sleuths are better at uncovering these things than people tend to anticipate.

See also:


Attention

COVID-19: 'Solemn day' for BC as thousands of health-care workers defy vaccination deadline

Adrian Dix
© Felipe Fittipaldi /Government of B.C.
Health minister Adrian Dix and chief provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry provide an update on COVID-19 on Oct. 26 2021.
B.C.'s health minister called Tuesday a "solemn day" as 4,090 health care workers missed the deadline for mandatory COVID-19 vaccination and were placed on unpaid leave before they could potentially lose their job. Advertisement Article content

That is just over three per cent of B.C.'s 126,000 health-care workers.


Adrian Dix said 1,369 of the unvaccinated workers are in the Interior region of the province and that overall vaccination rates are also low in Northern health.

"Health authorities are taking steps across B.C. to deal with the challenges presented by this," Dix said.

The same day, B.C. announced a plan for all eligible residents aged 12 and up to get booster shots by next May as part of a program that is already underway for those at highest risk of breakthrough infection.

NPC

New Jersey professor on White people: 'I want to say ... we got to take these motherf---kers out'

Brittney Cooper
© JOHANNES EISELE/AFP via Getty Images
Author Brittney Cooper speaks during the "Feminism: A Battlefield Report" session at the 10th Anniversary Women In The World Summit on April 11, 2019 in New York City
A Rutgers University professor said, "We got to take these motherf---kers out," when discussing White people in September.

Brittney Cooper, an associate professor in the Rutgers University Department of Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, made the comment during an event titled, "Unpacking the Attacks on Critical Race Theory," hosted by The Root.

"Like, the thing I want to say to you is we got to take these motherf---kers out. But, like, we can't say that, right? We can't say, like, I don't believe in a project of violence. I truly don't," Cooper said.

Cooper was responding to a question posed by Michael Harriot, senior writer for The Root, who asked Cooper what can be expected out of White people from Black Americans.

Cooper also said that she believes that "White folks" are not "eternal."

Comment: Cooper is also probably insane.


Eye 1

Queensland, Australia: Homes seized, bank accounts raided and licences cancelled as government chases $5.2million in unpaid fines for breaking Covid rules

australia police beach arrest

The State Penalties Enforcement Register is chasing $5.2m in unpaid Covid-19 fines from individuals and businesses who are accused of flouting rule during the pandemic.
Queenslanders who received fines for breaking Covid-19 rules risk having their homes seized and bank accounts frozen in a government crackdown to collect $5.2 million in repayments.

The State Penalties Enforcement Register is expected to collect 3,046 unpaid fines from the pandemic on behalf of Queensland Health.

More than 2,755 fines were from individuals and businesses accused of breaking Covid-19 restrictions and the rest either still under investigation or pending payment.

Comment: Who knew Australia would be at the forefront of the complete fascist takeover and the disintegration of human rights?

Aee also:


Ice Cube

'Oh Hell No': Ice Cube ditches movie & $9 million after refusing to get Covid-19 vaccine

Ice Cube
© Aric Becker-USA TODAY Sports
Rapper and actor Ice Cube has exited a movie for which he was supposed to be paid $9 million after refusing requests to get the Covid-19 vaccine.

Ice Cube has left the ironically titled 'Oh Hell No' Sony comedy, according to sources familiar with the matter who spoke to The Hollywood Reporter. Cube, known for films like 'Friday' and songs such as 'It Was a Good Day', was set to co-star in the feature with comedic actor Jack Black.

The production was set to kick off in December in Hawaii. Cube, whose real name is O'Shea Jackson, previously joined numerous other celebrities during the coronavirus pandemic and encouraged mask-wearing, even donating thousands of face coverings to an Oklahoma college. He also sold t-shirts during the pandemic encouraging masking and raising funds for healthcare workers.

Comment: When he and other celebrities encouraged mask-wearing, even donated thousands of face coverings when the Corona circus started, nobody said anything about him and he was a "responsible" person back then.

But when he publicly refused the vaccine the same brainwashed celebrities and his colleagues were among the first to attack him.
Ice Cube is one of the few celebrities that we know about that has refused the Covid vaccine.

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Bizarro Earth

Another Metropolitan Police officer is in prison facing a rape charge

scotland yard

PC Adam Zaman, 28, who is based on the East Area Command Unit, was charged by the City of London Police.
A Metropolitan Police officer has appeared in court charged with rape.

PC Adam Zaman appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 27 October before district judge Snow.

Zaman was represented by Ricky Blennerhassett. He is accused of raping a woman on Sunday 24 October at the Andaz Hotel in Liverpool Street, central London.

Not an isolated incident

The charges against Zaman are doubly shocking, coming as they do after the brutal abduction, rape and murder of Sarah Everard. Serving Metropolitan police officer Wayne Couzens used his authority as a police officer to arrest, handcuff and ultimately kill Everard. On 30 September, Couzens was sentenced to life in prison.

Comment: See also:


Briefcase

Andrew Cuomo charged over alleged groping of former aide

Cuomo
© AP/Seth Wenig
Ex-Governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, expected to be arrested next week.
Disgraced ex-Gov. Andrew Cuomo was charged Thursday with groping a former aide in Albany's Executive Mansion — a crime that could send him to jail for a year if he's convicted.

A misdemeanor criminal complaint filed in Albany City Court alleges that Cuomo, 63,
"did intentionally, and for no legitimate purpose, forcibly place his hand under the blouse shirt of the victim ... and onto her intimate body part. Specifically, the victims [sic] left breast for the purposes of degrading and satisfying his sexual desire."
The incident allegedly took place on the afternoon of Dec. 7 on the second floor of the Executive Mansion, the governor's official residence.

The name of the alleged victim was redacted from the complaint, but a lawyer representing former Cuomo aide Brittany Commisso, 33, acknowledged it's her. The complaint charges Cuomo with forcible touching, which carries a maximum sentence of one year in jail.

The alleged evidence against him includes: a text message from Cuomo's cellphone, state police aviation records for Dec. 7 and news reports of a press conference that day, state police BlackBerry PIN messages, swipe card records from the state Capitol, and Commisso's testimony to the Attorney General's Office.

X

Loudoun County sheriff's office rejected school superintendent's insane plan to weaponize police against parents

Chapman
© YouTube
Loudon County Sheriff Mike Chapman
The Loudon County Sheriff's Office (LCSO) refused to comply with Superintendent Scott Ziegler's request to weaponize law enforcement against parents who wanted to voice their concerns with Loudoun County Public Schools' behavior at school board meetings, documents obtained by Fox News indicate.

Ziegler, who denied there was any record of an assault ever occurring in an LCPS bathroom, sent an email on August 6 to the LCSO asking for a "five-person Quick Reaction Force (QRF)," multiple undercover deputies, and even a special operations team on standby for the district to utilize for school board meetings.

Fox News reported that, according to Sheriff Mike Chapman, there were already security measures in places including "10 armed security personnel and magnetometers for people entering the building."

Sheriff Mike Chapman denied Ziegler's "extraordinary" request and said that the school district was asking for more than was necessary. He replied:
"[Y]our request is extraordinary and would likely constitute LCSO's commitment of a minimum of approximately 65 sworn deputies. Despite this, you fail to provide any justification for such a manpower intensive request."
Chapman told Fox News that he bolded the words "extraordinary" and "any justification" in his original email for emphasis.

Comment: See also:


Footprints

Ohio school board head, who penned controversial race and equity resolution, resigns before being ousted by state senators

Laura Kohler
© Flipboard
Former Ohio State Board of Education president Laura Kohler
The head of the Ohio Board of Education has resigned her position just before being voted out by the state Senate. Last year she drafted a resolution that became a flashpoint for a war over how race issues are taught at schools.

Laura Kohler announced her Friday resignation, saying she didn't have a way to keep her position and serve her full term. Another board member, Eric Poklar, is expected to be removed from his office by state senators in a vote later in the day. Both officials imperiled their positions over their support of a controversial resolution on race and equity in education, which critics said was pushing the so-called critical race theory (CRT) on public schools.

The three-page Resolution 20 was passed by the board weeks after the murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis and advised the state education system to fight against racial inequality in various ways. Among other things, it provided for implicit bias training for Ohio Department of Education employees and contractors. That part was met with a strong pushback due to perceived CRT undertones behind the provision.

The CRT framework states that racism in the US is ingrained in certain institutions and benefits all white people. Those who don't hold racist views themselves should still be taught to see their privileges and change their behavior accordingly, the reasoning goes. Opponents say this viewpoint is racist itself and accuse CRT proponents of trying to change the public education system to indoctrinate children in accordance with its tenets under the guise of fighting racism and inequality.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

Wisconsin sheriff claims to have proof of election fraud

Sargeant Michael Luell
© KPVI
Sgt. Michael Luell
A Wisconsin sheriff claims to have found proof of election fraud in one of the most unusual places: a nursing home.

The Sheriff's Office of Racine County held a press conference on Thursday to reveal a deceased resident at a nursing home voted absentee in the 2020 election. The Ridgewood Care Facility resident, named Shirley, died on Oct. 9, 2020, a month before the election was held. Sgt. Michael Luell said:
"Shirley was on severe cognitive decline, physically she was on decline, and to some degree, she was giving up on life, unfortunately, in her last days. She didn't want to keep on current events. She didn't watch TV, didn't read, and was just at a low point before she passed."
The office investigated the issue further and found the nursing home had an unusual surge in votes from residents during the 2020 election. Of the 42 families with members in Ridgewood Care Facility, eight said their relatives did not have the cognitive ability to vote but allegedly still had ballots cast in their names.