SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds

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SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds

SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds

@LetUsGetHonest

https://t.co/MktYyy8ogy ~Since 2009. Critical Analysis of #FamilyCourtReformists,FakeAdvocacy etc 17Dec2025~https://t.co/kkXtHyiALG

1988-2018 #SFBayArea.2018,NOYB 가입일 Ocak 2012
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SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds
This is a courtesy notice 4-post thread, Pinned. Effective only until I pay WordPress for the redirect domain name. Soon, I hope! Main message/exhibit in posts 1 & 2, but as usual, See Also posts 3 & 4 for a glimpse from blog Admin dashboard of posts in draft for (as I recall) May 2021. I'd been looking to edit the post on my X profile (wp.me/psBXH-8v2) For now, until I pay my annual bill, subsitute the longer domain name "FamilyCourtMatters.WordPress.com^^ for "FamilyCourtMatters.org" which has been coughing up a "This domain name is parked" message. I normally use shortlinks for specific posts; these still work. So this should only affect instances where I'd specified a search string instead of hunting for an exact post. ^^(doing so just now pulls up the usual #HMRF random-generated image, i.e., that version works)
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SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds 리트윗함
Johnny
Johnny@j00ny369T·
Sheeps wool insulation.
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IISS News
IISS News@IISS_org·
Israel’s success in developing a range of artificial-intelligence-enabled military technologies is underpinned by tie-ups with commercial entities, from Israeli start-ups to Palantir and big-tech corporations including Amazon, Google and Microsoft. These provide key enabling technologies, ranging from facial-recognition software and hardware that facilitate Israeli mass surveillance of Palestinians to commercial cloud servers used to host intercepted communications and train the Israel Defense Forces’ planned Arabic large language model. Explore the latest #ChartingMiddleEast analysis by Noor Hammad: go.iiss.org/47Bz0zy
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“Sudden And Unexpected”
Healthy 24-year-old Army National Guard specialist. Could run 10 miles, play basketball, zero heart issues. After two mandated Moderna shots in 2021? Burning pain, chest on fire, sky-high heart rate… then THREE heart attacks, a mini-stroke, and emergency pacemaker surgery. Now she pops 27 pills a day, racks up $70k+ in medical debt, and lived out of her car at one point. The Army’s own internal memo called it ‘In Line of Duty’ and linked her debilitating POTS to the COVID vaccine. They delayed care for 19 months, cut her loose, and left her behind. She followed orders. They abandoned her. This is the real cost of the mandate. How many more young soldiers got wrecked and swept under the rug?
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This type of info, but I doubt I'll find the man's name again. He was on the East coast USA and also an instructor. During a time when Long Beach/LosAngeles ports were on strike? DNR details.
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@johnKonrad I read about gCaptain because of this post: appreciated. See top-left corner for time stamp (sleepless tonight). A few years ago I was following another excellent presenter on (US) ports. DNR exact name but he was modest & thoro. Can't do nowadays:crises Time 4💤
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John Ʌ Konrad V@johnkonrad

NATO is in far bigger danger than anyone realizes. And the reason has nothing to do with defense budgets. The real danger is psychological. It’s cultural. Europeans didn’t just free-ride on American security for 80 years. They built an entire identity around the idea that they evolved past the Americans protecting them. That identity is now the single biggest obstacle to Western survival. And the darkest irony is: we helped build it. After World War II, Europe wasn’t just economically shattered. Its culture was in ruins. The cities, the universities, the concert halls, the museums. Rubble. The Marshall Plan rebuilt the economy. But culture wasn’t a priority. Not at first. Then the Iron Curtain dropped. And suddenly culture became a weapon. American diplomats, academics, artists & scholars flooded Western Europe. We funded their universities. Supported their orchestras. Rebuilt their museums. Promoted their intellectual life. Not because European culture needed saving for its own sake. Because Eastern Europeans were struggling for Maslow’s mist basic needs. We needed the view from the other side of that Wall to be intoxicating. So America built Western Europe into a showcase of self-actualization. Art. Philosophy. Cafe culture. Long vacations. Universities where people studied literature instead of surviving. We were manufacturing jealousy. And it worked. The Wall came down. But here’s what no one accounted for. When you give a society self-actualization on someone else’s tab long enough, they forget it was a gift. They start believing it was organically theirs. And when they look at the country that funded it all, a country busy building aircraft carriers and semiconductor fabs and shale fields instead of reaching the Maslow’s pinnacle. An overweight American in a ball cap who can’t tell Monet from Pissarro. Who eats fast food. Who drives a truck. Who builds strip malls instead of piazzas. And to a culture trained in aesthetics but stripped of strategic awareness, that American looks uncivilized. So the arrogance takes root. And once a culture decides another is beneath them, they stop listening. Americans say wars are sometimes necessary: crude. Oil is the backbone of prosperity: unsophisticated. Kids build companies in garages that reshape the planet: crass. Wall Street finances the global economy: vulgar. Europe has no world-class technology sector. No military capable of strong defense. No energy independence. No AI capacity. What Europe has is culture. The culture we paid for at the expense of us reaching Maslow’s pinnacle. For decades that was fine. We funded the museums, protected the sea lanes, and tolerated the sneering because the arrangement worked. Then Europeans stopped keeping the contempt private. They started saying it to our faces. In their media. In their parliaments. At every international forum. “Americans are stupid. Americans are violent. Americans are a threat to democracy.” We could have moved the Louvre to NY. We could have built a Venice here. We could have stolen your best artists, designers, philosophers and more… like your conquering armies did for centuries. Instead we funded them. And all we asked for in return was to let us visit. You don’t have the military to defend your borders. You don’t have the technology to compete. You don’t have the energy to heat your homes without begging dictators. What you have is an 80-year superiority complex FUNDED BY AMERICANS, protected by American soldiers, and built on the false belief that self-actualization is civilization. It isn’t. Civilization is the ability to sustain itself. By that measure, Europe isn’t a civilization at all. It’s a dependency with better wine. That’s not a threat. It’s a weather report. Build a Navy. Or don’t. But stop lecturing the people who made you “better than us” Our “crudeness” our “stunted liberal education” our “ugly strip malls” are because we sacrificed our culture to support yours.

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SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds
How's your French (mine's rusty) or German (mine, negligible)? Because this Wiki page not available in English: #Organisation_institutionnelle" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loterie_r…. Altho subparts of it may be. I gather (roughly) "romande" may refer to French-speaking Swiss cantons, 7? Of them, and Bern, a diff't case.
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SheStillSays: 1,IdentifyEntities 2,FollowTheFunds
See my short thread 3 hours earlier responding to an article on the CSW (Commission on the Status of Women) and US declining to support some vote. I provided two images emphasizing, of course " #IdentifytheEntities " and a PROJECT=/= a PERSON (corporate or other entity). Images:
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5/ entity became (later) a public-interest LLC whose main "thing" was membership to establish integrity of -- get this -- gambling operations (Casinos). If I remember its name; there are likely a few hashtags for my prior X threads tracking it, I may (strong maybe) post it here.
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4/ It says, offices in Switzerland (Lausanne) and Canada (I believe Quebec) but members internationally as you can see. Caught my attention because, USA-side some years back, a DCFS in either NH or VT (I think NH), & my memory not specific, somehow had an audit; that auditing...
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CSW= commission on the status of women. "Health Policy Watch, housed in the Swiss-based non-profit Global Policy Reporting Association, reports on the leading global health policy challenges & trends of today, linking journalists in global North and South
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Health Policy Watch@HealthPolicyW

For the first time in decades, consensus broke at the UN Commission on the Status of Women. The United States cast the lone “no” vote on a document aimed at improving justice systems for women & girls worldwide. ✍️@kerrycullinan11 @UN_Women @unwomenchief healthpolicy-watch.news/us-isolated-in…

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Steve 🇺🇸
Steve 🇺🇸@SteveLovesAmmo·
We STILL ARE NOT talking about this enough… Members of Congress are exempt from ObamaCare. Members of Congress are exempt from vaccine mandates. Members of Congress are exempt from insider trading crimes. Members of Congress are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. Members of Congress are exempt from FISA warrantless spying. Members of Congress are exempt from term limits. Congress has always been the problem. America’s Founding Fathers must be rolling in their graves.
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@newstart_2024 I watch elite tennis when I can (when it's free) and so much enjoy seeing the top players evolve, rise to challenges, work through injuries etc. At first was pretty cool to Djokovic but now have the highest respect. Excellence strategy, early (youth) starts parallels also music
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Camus
Camus@newstart_2024·
Novak Djokovic opened up about something deeply personal. After the epic 2019 Wimbledon final against Roger Federer — where he saved match points, wasn’t playing his best, and the stats were heavily against him — he walked off the court and told his team and family: “I don’t know how I won this match. I have no idea.” He believes a higher spiritual force intervened — the same divine power he says has helped him through the most difficult moments in his life and career. Djokovic describes himself as a man of faith who feels that when you open your heart, pray, and truly believe, something greater steps in. Interestingly, modern performance psychology has started exploring how a strong sense of connection to something larger than oneself can quiet the brain’s self-critical chatter and unlock deeper focus and resilience under extreme pressure. It’s a rare glimpse into how one of the greatest athletes of all time combines world-class training with deep spiritual conviction. What do you think — can faith and elite performance work together like this, or is it purely mental toughness?
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"This incredible story of survival actually served as a major inspiration for the famous movie "Life is Beautiful" by Roberto Benigni. Just like in the film, a father used every trick and bit of love he had to protect his child’s innocence from a nightmare." An Excellent movie.
The Husky@Mr_Husky1

He was only four years old when his entire world collapsed. At an age when most children are learning to ride a bike or playing with wooden blocks, Joseph Schlipstein was learning the weight of a silence so heavy it could mean the difference between life and death. His life had been simple before the soldiers arrived. He knew the warmth of his mother’s voice calling him from across the yard and the strength of his father’s arms lifting him toward the sky. Then, in a blur of gray uniforms and shouting, that safety vanished. Joseph was forced onto a crowded train with his parents. The air inside the wooden wagons was thick with terror. When the doors finally creaked open, the boy looked up to see a gate with the cold words “Jedem das Seine”—To Each His Own. This was Buchenwald. In a place designed for exhaustion and industrial death, a four-year-old boy was a logistical impossibility. He was too small to work and, according to the cruel logic of the camp, too “useless” to live. His father, driven by a desperation that only a parent can understand, made a choice. He decided to hide Joseph inside a suitcase. Day after day, at the risk of his own life, the father would secretly open that cramped space just long enough for the boy to breathe, to drink a little water, and to hear the frantic whisper: “Stay quiet, Joseph. Do not make a sound.” His mother would occasionally manage to slip a tiny crust of bread into his pocket. For Joseph, the world became the darkness of that suitcase, punctuated only by the terrifying sounds of sirens and the heavy boots of guards passing by. Eventually, the secret was discovered. Soldiers found the suitcase and pulled out a boy with wide, hollow eyes and tattered clothes. His father was brutally beaten for his defiance. Curiously, Joseph was not killed. In a bizarre twist of fate, some of the guards decided to keep him alive. They called him the “little one of the camp.” He became a sort of mascot—a living ghost in a factory of death. Joseph didn’t understand why he was still there. He only remembered the freezing wind, the constant smoke from the chimneys, and the lines of men who walked away and never returned. Most clearly, he remembered his father’s face, looking at him with eyes full of terror and a love that bridged the gap between life and the grave. When the camp was liberated in 1945, Joseph was only five years old and looked like a skeleton. Years later, a photo of him in his striped uniform went around the world. He was seven, but his eyes looked like they belonged to a man who had seen everything. This incredible story of survival actually served as a major inspiration for the famous movie "Life is Beautiful" by Roberto Benigni. Just like in the film, a father used every trick and bit of love he had to protect his child’s innocence from a nightmare. Joseph eventually moved on to live a full life, but he never stopped telling his story. He spoke in schools and museums, not to dwell on the horror, but to honor the hands that saved him. He spoke of his father’s hands that hid him and the inexplicable moment when a soldier chose mercy over cruelty. He kept that old suitcase until the day he died. It wasn’t a symbol of a prison to him; it was a monument to a father who risked everything for one more day of life for his son. Joseph’s life proves that even when humanity seems completely lost, love creates a small, dark space where hope can survive. Follow us Lost in Yesterday

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