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Nuclear Destruction, the Internet, etc

Roswitha said:
I skipped to the end of the video when checking the comments briefly, to stop it from buffering a lot, and that "doctor" said,
The pharmaceutical industry...is, according to Forbes magazine Fortune 500, the single-most profitable industry on the planet. The top 10 pharmaceutical companies make more profit in an average year than the next 490 companies globally in the aggregate. What that means is that the Pharmaceutical industry is more profitable than war and oil combined.
Huh. Well. As is known - pharmaceuticals don't make cures; they make money. Where does this money go? To materialistic shit, selling/swapping Souls for materialism. I did a quick search again, and I found this from 2015 -


Fortune 500 Pharma and Biotech Companies
Eleven pharma and biotech companies appeared on this year’s Fortune 500 list. While there are additional organizations (e.g., Procter & Gamble) that manufacturer medicines on the list, they weren’t classified as pharmaceutical companies in the ranking.

These are the drug companies that made this year’s list, ranked by total annual revenue:

  • #37: Johnson & Johnson
  • #56: Pfizer
  • #71: Merck
  • #118: Gilead Sciences
  • #145: Amgen
  • #146: AbbVie
  • #151: Eli Lilly
  • #195: Bristol-Myers Squibb
  • #298: Biogen
  • #369: Celgene
  • #380: Allergan

https://blogs.perficient.com/lifesciences/2015/07/09/fortune-500-pharma-and-biotech-companies/
 
I suppose it goes without saying that this is some seriously scary shit.
 
There's a huge scar on the side of mars.

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/files/2011/03/marsexpress_longcrater_3D.jpg

That's not an impact crater, that's carving. I mean maybe it could be a mining outpost, but it is most likely a weapon was used there.
 
http://www.thule.org/mars/index.html

This might actually back up your account High Priestess Maxine.
 
FancyMancy said:
Roswitha said:
It is hard to find information that isn't completely biased. But some things can be pushed to the extreme.
"She"? The person you emailed, or this "doctor" in the video?

With She I was referring to the person in the video.
I thought the one I emailed was male but I am not sure.
 
StraitShot47 said:
There's a huge scar on the side of mars.

http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/badastronomy/files/2011/03/marsexpress_longcrater_3D.jpg

That's not an impact crater, that's carving. I mean maybe it could be a mining outpost, but it is most likely a weapon was used there.
I'm not an expert on explosives, but wouldn't the crater be more round than oblong? Here we could get into conspiracies! That it is the impact crater of a ship which crash-landed and the end bit at the right of the picture is the entrance/exit ramp, and that it was left there for such a long time before the jew/its ilk removed it that it gathered enough dust. Maybe it was a quarry. Of course, I can't see a ruler to scale it.
 
Roswitha said:
FancyMancy said:
Roswitha said:
It is hard to find information that isn't completely biased. But some things can be pushed to the extreme.
"She"? The person you emailed, or this "doctor" in the video?

With She I was referring to the person in the video.
I thought the one I emailed was male but I am not sure.
Well, she says that she doesn't give the patients mind-altering legal narcotics, but she lied about other things. Let's set up a secret camera and mic in her consultation room and see!
 
"The Jews are also working overtime in trying to repeal internet neutrality, to where sites will be blocked and service will be drastically slower.".....

Interview with FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on Net Neutrality.....some interesting comments by him.

https://www.recode.net/2017/11/28/16711256/fcc-ajit-pai-net-neutrality-cher-twitter
-------------------------------------------------
Pai had sharp words for Silicon Valley tech giants who are trying to avoid regulation.
by Tony Romm@TonyRomm Nov 28, 2017, 2:12pm EST

Interview with FCC Chairman Ajit Pai on Net Neutrality.....some interesting comments by him.

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai thinks everyone from Cher to Twitter has it wrong when they say that his efforts to roll back the U.S. government’s existing net neutrality rules will spell the death of the web.

Instead, Pai said during an event in Washington, D.C., on Tuesday that tech giants could pose the greatest threat by discriminating against viewpoints on the internet. “They might cloak their advocacy in the public interest,” he said, “but the real interest of these internet giants is in using the regulatory process to cement their dominance in the internet economy.”

The surprising rebuke came as Pai forged ahead with his plan to end the net neutrality protections adopted by the Federal Communications Commission under former President Barack Obama. Those rules subject broadband providers like AT&T, Charter, Comcast* and Verizon to utility-style regulation, all in a bid to stop them from blocking access to web pages, slowing down connections or prioritizing some content over others.

Pai has maintained that the rules, adopted in 2015, are “heavy handed,” and his proposal would eliminate them entirely. To critics, it would open the door for so-called online fast lanes, where broadband providers charge content makers for faster delivery of their movies or music. To Pai, it would help broadband investment in the United States. A vote is slated for December.

To begin, though, the Republican FCC chairman took sharp aim at his critics on Tuesday— deriding “Hollywood celebrities, whose large online followings give them out-sized influence in shaping the public debate.”

In recent days, the likes of Kumail Nanjiani, a star of HBO’s “Silicon Valley;” Mark Ruffalo, who played the Hulk in “The Avengers;” and even noted telecom expert Cher have lambasted Pai for his repeal efforts. Pai highlighted the trio’s comments, seeking to respond to each of them. Cher, for example, previously tweeted the chairman’s proposal would “include LESS AMERICANS NOT MORE.” But Pai said it would “expand broadband networks and bring high-speed internet access to more Americans, not fewer.”

He didn’t spare tech companies from that criticism, either. Companies like Facebook, Google and Twitter — speaking through their main Washington, D.C.-based trade group, the Internet Association — have urged Pai to stand down. In response, Pai sought to make an example of Twitter. He specifically raised the fact that the company at one point prevented a Republican congresswoman from promoting a tweet about abortion, only to change its mind amid a public backlash.

“Now look: I love Twitter,” Pai began. “But let’s not kid ourselves; when it comes to a free and open Internet, Twitter is a part of the problem. The company has a viewpoint and uses that viewpoint to discriminate.”


“And unfortunately, Twitter is not an outlier,” Pai continued. “Indeed, despite all the talk, and all the fear, that broadband providers could decide what internet content consumers can see, recent experience shows that so-called edge providers are in fact deciding what content they see. These providers routinely block or discriminate against content they don’t like.”


Pai then charged that companies “want to place much tougher regulations on broadband providers than they are willing to have placed upon themselves,” before adding: “I don’t blame them for trying. But the government shouldn’t aid and abet this effort.”
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Shaitan

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