8chan/8kun QResearch Posts (5)
#15681697 at 2022-02-21 13:39:38 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #19828: Truth Social is LIVE Edition
>>15681406, >>15681631, >>15681636, >>15681659, >>15681673, >>15681687
continued pt 7
Wallace, Sharad Vyas, Jurre van Bergen, Alina Tsogoeva, Beauregard Tromp, Jan Strozyk, Tom Stocks, Graham Stack, Karina Shedrofsky, Khadija Sharife, Sana Sbouai, Paul Radu, Miranda Patrucic, Stelios Orphanides, James O'Brien, Ahmad Noorani, Mark Nightingale, Will Neal, Eli Moskowitz, Ilya Lozovsky, Erin Klazar, Peter Jones, Mathias J, Maha All Rashid, Kevin Hall, Kai Evans, Eduardo Goulart, Misha Gagarin, Brian Fitzpatrick, Jared Ferrie, Alex Dziadosz, Stevan Doj?inovi?, Romina Colman, Umar Cheema, Lindita Cela, Birgit Brauer, Natalia Abril Bonilla, Eric Barrett, Antonio Baquero, Abdulwahed Al, Mark Anderson; Le Monde: Madjid Zerrouky, Faustine Vincent, Maxime Vaudano, Joan Tilouine, Thomas Saintourens, Anne Michel, Benjamin Barthe, J?r?mie Baruch; NDR: Julia Wacket, Benedikt Strunz, Elena Kuch, Antonius Kempmann, Volkmar Kabisch, Johannes Jolmes, Lisa Maria Hagen, Lena G?rtler; New York Times: Ben Hubbard, David Enrich, Jesse Drucker; Miami Herald: Ben Wieder, Jay Weaver, Casey Frank, Antonio Delgado, Shirsho Dasgupta, Aaron Albright; CIN: Mirjana Popovic, Jelena Jevti?, Mubarek Asani, Aladin Abdagic; Trece Costa Rica Noticias: Mercedes Ag?ero R; Irpimedia: Lorenzo Bagnoli, Cecilia Anesi; Slidstvo_info: Yanina Korniienko, Anna Babinecs; Alqatiba: Walid Mejri, Rahma Behi; WDR: Massimo Bognanni; Investico: Karlijn Kuijpers, Romy van der Burgh; IRL: Bojan Stojanovski, Ivana Nasteska, Aleksandra Denkovska, Maja Jovanovska, David Ilieski, Saska Cvetkovska, Trifun Sitnikovski, Denica Chadikovska; http://Reporter.lu: Laurent Schmit, Luc Caregari; Le Soir: Jo?l Matriche, Xavier Counasse; SVT: Johan Wik?n, Aris Velizelos, Joachim Dyfvermark
http://Twala.info: Lyas Hallas; The Confluence: Josy Joseph; http://Armando.info: Roberto Deniz, Patricia Marcano, Joseph Poliszuk, Ewald Scharfenberg, Valentina Lares; profil: Michael Nikbakhsh, Stefan Melichar; Interferencia de Radioemisoras UCR: Hulda Miranda; Diario Rombe: Delf?n Mocache; La Stampa: Gianluca Paolucci; Expresso: Micael Pereira; Krik: Dragana Pe?o. Infolibre: Manuel Rico; Infobae: Sandra Crucianelli, Mariel Fitz Patrick, Iv?n Ruiz; La Naci?n: Hugo Alconada Mon; Libya: Rami Salim; Efecto Cocuyo: Laura Weffer; Hetq: Samson Martirosyan, Edik Baghdasaryan; Prachatai: Yiamyut Sutthichaya, Rattanaporn Khamenkit; Africa Uncensored: John; D?p?ches du Mali: David Dembele; Premium Times: Idris Akinbajo, Dapo Olorunyomi; Gambia: Marr Nyang; Verdade: Aderito Caldeira; The Namibian: Shinovene Immanuel; NewsHawks: Dumisani Muleya; L'Evenement: Moussa Aksar; http://Impact.sn: Momar Dieng.
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Links to another dictator ... and another
Ferdinand Marcos may have been Credit Suisse's most notorious client. He is arguably rivalled only by relatives of the brutal Nigerian dictator Sani Abacha, who is believed to have stolen as much as $5bn from his people in just six years. It has long been known that Credit Suisse provided services to Abacha's sons, opening Swiss accounts in which they deposited $214m.
Credit Suisse was publicly contrite after being kicked off a sustainable investment index over the affair. "We understand that the index was not really happy with us being involved with Abacha - we were not happy ourselves," a spokesperson said in 1999. "But we have addressed those problems and for several years we have taken internal measures to make sure nothing similar happens in the future."
Banks that enable kleptocrats to launder their money are complicit in a particularly far-reaching crime. The consequences for already impoverished populations can be devastating, as state coffers are siphoned, basic standards are eroded and trust in democracy plummets.
Politicians and state officials are among the riskiest customers for banks because of their access to public funds, particularly in developing nations with fewer legal safeguards against corruption. Banks and other financial institutions are required to subject politically exposed persons, or PEPs, to the most stringent checks, known as "enhanced due diligence".
The leaked Credit Suisse data is peppered with politicians and their allies who have been linked to corruption before, during or after they had their accounts. None are as well known as the Marcoses or the Abachas, but several wielded great power in countries from Syria to Madagascar, where they amassed personal fortunes.
continued
#13581457 at 2021-05-04 19:11:17 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #17199: White Boy Summer Edition
Judicial Watch: Records Show Iowa State Officials Coordinated with Big Tech to Censor Election Posts
The records show communications between the Secretary of State's office and representatives of Facebook and Twitter to Target Judicial Watch Posts.
(Washington, DC) Judicial Watch announced today that it received 624 pages of records from the office of the Secretary of State of Iowa, revealing how state officials pressured social media companies (Twitter and Facebook) to censor posts about the 2020 election. Included in these records were emails from Iowa state officials to representatives of Big Tech pressuring these companies to remove Judicial Watch's posts. The emails show how the state agency successfully pressured Facebook to censor Judicial Watch's post about Iowa's management of its voter rolls.
Judicial Watch received the records as a result of a June 2020 Iowa Open Records lawsuit that was filed after the Iowa Secretary of State failed to comply with a February 2020 request for records and communications about a Judicial Watch report regarding the accuracy of the state's voter registration rolls (Judicial Watch v. Iowa Secretary of State (No. 05771 EQCE085973)). Judicial Watch was represented by Iowa lawyer Alan R. Ostergren of Des Moines, Iowa.
The records show that officials in the Iowa Secretary of State office on multiple occasions contacted officials from Facebook and Twitter to try to have these companies remove Judicial Watch posts that raised concerns about Iowa's failure to maintain accurate election rolls.
On February 3, 2020, at 5:19 p.m., Kevin Hall, the communications director for the Iowa Secretary of State, wrote in a February 3, 2020, email to Facebook official Rachel Holland:
Rachel,
We've been playing whack-a-mole with this false story all day. Is there anything you can do to help: [likely https://www.facebook.com/JudicialWatch/posts/10157583458431943]
We've told them is fake. They have it PINNED to the top of their page.
Here's our rebuttal: https://sos.iowa.gov/news/2020_02_02.html
Holland responded at 6:11p.m., writing:
Hi Kevin,
Circling back with an update regarding the content posted by Judicial Watch. Our third-party fact checkers have rated this content false, and we have applied a filter over the content warning users before they click to see it that the content has been rated false by independent fact checkers.
Please continue to report violating content to us by emailing reports@content.facebook.com, and copying me (RachelHolland@fb.com), as I will be on an airplane for the next couple hours. Let me know if you have any questions or concerns regarding this or any other matters.
https://www.judicialwatch.org/press-releases/big-tech-iowa-officials/
#11436033 at 2020-11-03 22:41:39 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #14605: POTUS TWEETS IWO JIMA STATUE Edition
A spokesperson for the Iowa secretary of state says hand sanitizer on voters' hands caused a ballot scanner to jam at a polling place in Des Moines.
Spokesperson Kevin Hall says some voters' hands were moist when they handled the ballots and the buildup of sanitizer eventually caused the scanner to stop working.
The machine was fixed in about an hour.
https://apnews.com/article/election-2020-joe-biden-delaware-wilmington-elections-29b5233341f4eea285dab7fcb4a2709d
It was bound to happen.
#7830853 at 2020-01-16 18:22:37 (UTC+1)
Q Research General #10022: Follow The Pens Edition
Instead of Kidnapping and Caging Drug Addicts, Police are Getting Them Help-And It's Working
Tuscon, AZ - In the land of the free, when most police officers catch individuals with substances deemed illegal by the government, they will extort, kidnap, cage, or kill those individuals. This is the standard operating procedure for police departments from coast to coast. Despite applying this process of extortion, kidnapping, caging, and killing for over five decades - known as the war on drugs - addiction and drug use have gone up, not down. The good news is that some cops, not addicted to the violent war on drugs, are seeing that they cannot arrest or kill their way out of a drug problem. One department in Tuscon has saved nearly 1,000 people from the confines of cages related to their drug problems and the results are worth getting excited over.
About 18 months ago, the Tuscon police began a revolutionary shift in the way they treat people who they catch with drugs. Instead of kidnapping, caging, and killing them - they were given treatment options. The program started on July 1, 2018 and worked so well that it has been nationally recognized for its success, according Assistant Chief Kevin Hall.
"It's a public health issue, not a criminal justice issue," Hall said of the department's new drug policy.
We wholeheartedly agree. If you arrest someone for drug possession it does nothing to prevent future use which ensures that they will be ensnared in the system later down the road, costing taxpayers dearly.
As KGUN 9 reports:
In total, 953 people were deflected from jail. Eight people were self-referred, meaning they showed up at a police facility looking for help. And 19 people sought out a police officer or CSO in the field for help.
TPD's deflection program is one of six national learning sites designated by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, according to Hall. The designation allows other agencies from across the U.S. to visit Tucson to learn from TPD's program.
This policy needs to be adopted immediately by every single department in the country before anyone else has their life ruined by cops arresting them for drug use.
More
https://thefreethoughtproject.com/drug-program-tuscon-police/
#439214 at 2018-02-20 09:12:20 (UTC+1)
Q General #540 - Emergency Bake :^) Edition
>>439206
Raw data 9
TERZOTIS, JUDI Agent of "THE GANNETT-LOUISIANA CHARITABLE PROJECTS, INC." LAFAYETTE
TERZOTIS, JUDI President of "THE GANNETT-LOUISIANA CHARITABLE PROJECTS, INC." LAFAYETTE
TERZOTIS, JUDI President of "ALEXANDRIA NEWSPAPERS, INC." MCLEAN
THE GANNETT-LOUISIANA CHARITABLE PROJECTS, INC. Non-Profit Corporation ALEXANDRIA
Active
Business: THE GANNETT-LOUISIANA CHARITABLE PROJECTS, INC.
Charter Number: 35444874N
Registration Date: 3/12/2003
Domicile Address
1201 THIRD STREET
ALEXANDRIA, LA 71301
Mailing Address
P.O. BOX 7558
ALEXANDRIA, LA 71306
Status: Active
Annual Report Status: In Good Standing
File Date: 3/12/2003
Last Report Filed: 4/14/2017
Type: Non-Profit Corporation
Registered Agent(s)
Agent: JUDI TERZOTIS
Address 1: 1100 BERTRAND DR
City, State, Zip: LAFAYETTE, LA 70506
Appointment Date: 2/3/2017
Officer(s) Additional Officers: No
Officer: JUDI TERZOTIS
Title: President
Address 1: 1100 BERTRAND DR
City, State, Zip: LAFAYETTE, LA 70506
Officer: Kevin Hall
Title: Vice-President
Address 1: 1100 BERTRAND DR
City, State, Zip: LAFAYETTE, LA 70506
Officer: BRIAN BILLE
Title: Director
Address 1: 1100 BERTRAND DR
City, State, Zip: LAFAYETTE, LA 70506
Officer: MORGAN PINER
Title: Secretary
Address 1: 1100 BERTRAND DR
City, State, Zip: LAFAYETTE, LA 70506
Amendments on File (3)
Description Date
Revoked 5/18/2016
Reinstatement 2/3/2017
Appointing, Change, or Resign of Officer 4/17/2017
Source: https:// coraweb.sos.la.gov/CommercialSearch/CommercialSearchDetails.aspx?CharterID=621100_0B1702B890