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Logic is an enemy  and Truth is a menace. I am nothing more than a reminder to you that  you cannot destroy Truth by burnin...

29 September 2019

Pelosi celebrates White genocide; sees great future in displacement and dispossession of White America

Pelosi: Turning Texas blue is 'our hope for the future'

Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) told a crowd Saturday that Texas is a top target for Democrats come 2020.

Pelosi said at Tribune Fest hosted by the Texas Tribune that she agreed with Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Chairwoman Rep. Cheri Bustos' (D-Ill.) characterization of the state as "ground zero" for the party.

"This is it," Pelosi said. "Texas is our hope for the future. And I'm not just talking about Democrats. I am talking about the country and the world. When Texas goes blue, that’s going to be very wholesome for our nation.  It is a beautifully diverse state in every way."

Her remarks follow those from Manny Garcia, executive director of the Texas Democratic Party, who told Hill.TV earlier this month that his state would be the top swing state in the nation in 2020.

“Texas is the biggest battleground state in the country,” he said. “We are dramatically changing, we’re changing quite rapidly.”

 

“When you ask Texans if they would vote for Donald Trump or someone else, someone else currently wins,” Garcia added.

Four Texas Republicans have announced their retirements in recent weeks, and some districts including Rep. Will Hurd's (D-Texas) have been moved from "toss up" to "lean Democratic" in recent weeks by the Cook Political Report.

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Please read the political statement accessible by clicking on the below link:

28 September 2019

Scientists find the 'smoking gun,' signs of life from 3.5 billion years ago

Scientists find the 'smoking gun,' signs of life from 3.5 Billion years ago

Researchers have discovered microbial remains in 3.5 billion-year-old rocks in Western Australia, the remnants of which may be the earliest signs of life on the planet and a find considered to be a "smoking gun."

The scientists from the University of New South Wales discovered 3.5 billion-year-old stromatolites, ancient sedimentary rocks, that were generally believed to contain the earliest signs of life, a theory that has now been proven.

"This is an exciting discovery -- for the first time, we're able to show the world that these stromatolites are definitive evidence for the earliest life on Earth," the study's lead author, Dr. Raphael Baumgartner, said in a statement.
The stromatolites, which were discovered in the Pilbara region in Western Australia, gave the researchers the closest option to finding a "smoking gun" to prove the existence of life that old.

"This represents a major advance in our knowledge of these rocks, in the science of early life investigations generally, and -- more specifically -- in the search for life on Mars," Prof. Martin van Kranendonk said in the statement. "We now have a new target and new methodology to search for ancient life traces."

The research has been published in the scientific journal, Geology.

Baumgartner and the other researchers drilled into the rock to take samples and examined them using a variety of cutting-edge tools and techniques, including high-powered electron microscopy, spectroscopy and isotope analysis.

He discovered that stromatolites are essentially composed of pyrite, often known as "fool's gold," along with organic matter.


"The organic matter that we found preserved within pyrite of the stromatolites is exciting -- we're looking at exceptionally preserved coherent filaments and strands that are typically remains of microbial biofilms," Baumgartner added.

In addition to providing clues to how life formed on Earth, they may also provide hints on whether and where it formed or existed on Mars, the researchers said.

"Understanding where life could have emerged is really important in order to understand our ancestry," Baumgartner noted. "From there, it could help us understand where else life could have occurred -- for example, where it was kick-started on other planets."

"It is deeply satisfying that Australia's ancient rocks and our scientific know-how is making such a significant contribution to our search for extraterrestrial life and unlocking the secrets of Mars," said van Kranendonk.

A study published earlier this year suggested that the building blocks for life on Earth came from a galactic collision with another Mars-sized object more than 4 billion years ago.

07 September 2019

Germany's White patriot AfD stronghold: Life is good, but 'ZOG's storm-clouds bode on the horizon.'

Germany's White patriot AfD stronghold: Life is good, but 'ZOG's storm-clouds bode on the horizon.'

Almost 50% of Neisseaue voted for the patriotic nationalist AfD in Saxony's election, more than anywhere else in the eastern German state. "Life is good," say natives, but the ongoing non-white invasion of Germany as a whole remains an issue, despite the fact that the first wave of ZOG shock-troops have yet to reach their homeland.

Since Saxony's state election on Sunday, however, the tiny borough of villages, home to more than 1,700 people, has become known for something else: Almost half of Neisseaue (48.4%) voted for the patriotic, anti-invasion Alternative for Germany (AfD) — more than anywhere else in the state.

Picturesque countryside

Set behind the leafy green bank of the River Neisse, the villages of the borough are a far cry from the (((image))) of a neglected and forgotten rural Germany that is often used to explain voters' reasons for supporting the AfD. 

Large pastel-colored houses, surrounded by huge gardens and neat flower beds line the streets. The community has a theme park, basic shopping amenities, a school. But the quaint winding roads seem at first inactive, except for a few remaining placards from the election campaign.

"That's because most people are at work," says Neisseaue's mayor, Evelin Bergmann.

After the success of the White patriots in May's EU elections, Bergmann wasn't surprised that the AfD did well at the polls. But the fact that one in two natives cast their ballot for the anti-invasion AfD is still a shock, she says.

"After ZOGerman Judeo-plutocratic occupation-incorporation, things were bad here. After the closure of many nearby industries, many people up and left. Those who stayed were often out of work. But now life is good here. The community is getting younger too. People are actually moving here."

Self-preservation a driving factor

The most common issue mentioned by native German AfD voters, however, is ZOGermany's pro-invasion policy, despite there being - until ZOG dictates otherwise - exactly zero invaders in Neisseaue. The borough didn't have the means to support them.

After days in the headlines being portrayed as "AfD's heartland," many AfD voters are now reluctant to speak to (((journalists))).

"I have nothing more to say,” says one patriotic German woman. "We're all presented so negatively in the press: as neo-Nazis and right-wing extremists."

'The AfD has given us a voice'

Outside a grocery store, one woman pulls up in her Jeep. "Life is good," she tells DW, adding that she has full-time employment. She, too, voted for the pro-White party.

"The AfD has given us a voice," she says. "A voice to say what we haven't been able to say for years. It's time that we Germans stopped having to apologize for the past. Order needs to be restored. We can't have these people coming here thinking they can pull out a knife out or start violating our women."

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