#Dr. Jack Kavanaugh
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drjackkavanaughart · 2 years ago
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Nanotech, a worldwide leader in the field of graphene-based energy storage products and owner of 42 patents, is the only company in the world capable of producing non-flammable, cost effective lithium-ion batteries. While home to its current R&D center, this new factory will further Nanotech's ability to bring a much-needed safe battery technology to the market. Founded in 2014 by Dr. Jack Kavanaugh and noted UCLA scientists, Dr. Richard Kaner and Dr. Maher El-Kady, Nanotech Energy is a privately held company backed by Multiverse Investment Fund, Fubon Financial Group and other strategic investors.
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witchexia · 11 days ago
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WHAT I THINK SOME OF THE SCP PERSONNEL WOULD GO AS FOR HALLOWEEN 。⋆🕯️🎃 (feel free to draw some of these!)
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Dr. Benjamin Kondraki - A beer/Aquafina bottle or somebody like Jack Sparrow
Dr. Alto Clef - A clown or SCP-096 to scare the SHIT out of everyone or an inflatable dick costume
Dr. Agatha Rights - Die in the Disco Emily Kavanaugh
James Talloran - A demon
Dr. Simon Glass - Michael Scott from The Office or Kirby
Dr. Sophia Light - Pearl from Steven Universe
Dr. Iceberg - Elsa or a snowman or 'the lettuce man' (holding a board that says 'FREE LETTUCE' and in another hand a basket of iceberg lettuce)
Dr. Gears - He doesn't care or have time for Halloween but someone probably would force him to be a massive teddy bear
Dr. Elias Shaw - Pink Guy
Dr. Zyn Kiryu - Kanae Kocho
Dr. Kain Pathos Crow - Gromit
Dr. Blaire Roth - Hello Kitty
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nanotechenergy · 4 years ago
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The "AAA Car Doctor" John Paul chats with Dr. Jack Kavanaugh, founder and CEO of Nanotech Energy about the most recent developments in electric vehicle battery technology.
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ryankavanaughus · 6 years ago
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Dr. Jack Kavanaugh, M.D., DDS, MBA serves as Managing Member of General Partner, Multiverse Investment Fund I, LP at Multiverse Investment Fund. He also serves as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Nanotech Energy Inc.
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intelligentliving · 4 years ago
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One of the main factors weighing down on the electric vehicle (EV) revolution is that electric cars take longer to charge than filling up a gas tank. Most people choose convenience over saving the planet. However, that’s possibly all about to change. Los Angeles-based Nanotech Energy, who recently got $27.5...
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nicholasmorley · 5 years ago
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As a Successful Business Dr Jack Kavanaugh has this Unique skill et the development of different business. He this has worked with Calhoun Vision, he has Created the next generation medical treatment equipment.
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The Man of the Ferry (1943, Short)
Dangerous Venture (1947) - Red
This Time for Keeps (1948) - Redheaded Soldier at Pool (uncredited)
Beyond Glory (1948) - Bit Role (uncredited)
He Walked by Night (1948) - Detective Questioning Pete (uncredited)
The Stratton Story (1949) - Detroit Player (uncredited)
Illegal Entry (1949) - Dave (uncredited)
The Great Sinner (1949) - Cabbie (uncredited)
I Was a Male War Bride (1949) - Red - Seaman (uncredited)
The Stratton Story (1949)
Task Force (1949) - Capt. Ken Williamson (uncredited)
The Doctor and the Girl (1949) - Surgeon at Bellevue (uncredited)
Free for All (1949) - Pilot
Twelve O'Clock High (1949) - Sgt. Keller - Guard at Gate (uncredited)
The File on Thelma Jordon (1950) - Police Photographer (uncredited)
When Willie Comes Marching Home(1950) - Lt. K. Geiger (uncredited)
One Way Street (1950) - Cop at Second Accident (uncredited)
Love That Brute (1950) - Henchman #1 in Cigar Store (uncredited)
The Gunfighter (1950) - Swede (uncredited)
My Friend Irma Goes West (1950) - Pilot
Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1950) - Det. Fowler
Right Cross (1950) - Ken, the Third Reporter
Three Secrets (1950) - Officer (uncredited)
The Flying Missile (1950) - Crewman Pete McEvoy
The Company She Keeps (1951) - Rex Fisher (uncredited)
Up Front (1951) - Cooper (uncredited)
Rawhide (1951) - Lt. Wingate (uncredited)
The Thing from Another World (1951) - Captain Patrick Hendry
Angel Face (1952) - Bill Crompton
The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms(1953) - Col. Jack Evans
Fighter Attack (1953) - George
The Bigamist (1953) - Tom Morgan, Defense Attorney
Ring of Fear (1954) - Shreveport
Down Three Dark Streets (1954) - FBI Agent Zack Stewart
The Steel Cage (1954) - Steinberg, Convict Painter (segment "The Face")
Davy Crockett, King of the Wild Frontier(1955) - Colonel Jim Bowie
Rage at Dawn (1955) - Monk Claxton
It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955) - Cmdr. Pete Mathews
Davy Crockett and the River Pirates(1956) - Jocko
The Steel Jungle (1956) - Dr. Lewy
The Man in the Grey Flannel Suit(1956) - Lt. Hank Mahoney (uncredited)
The Great Locomotive Chase (1956) - Anthony Murphy
The Search For Bridey Murphy (1956) - Rex Simmons
The Wings of Eagles (1957) - Capt. Herbert Allen Hazard
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral (1957) - Bat Masterson
The Vampire (1957) - Sheriff Buck Donnelly
Jet Pilot (1957) - Sergeant (uncredited)
Cry Terror! (1958) - Agent Frank Cole
uncredited)
Bat Masterson! (1960) - Reed Amherst (diamond con man)
Seven Ways from Sundown (1960) - Texas Ranger Lieutenant Herly
Perry Mason (1960) - Deputy D.A. Jack Alvin - S4 E3, the I'll Fated Faker
X-15 (1961) - Col. Craig Brewster
Sea Hunt (1961), Season 4, Episode 33
Stark Fear (1962) - Cliff Kane
40 Guns to Apache Pass (1966) - Corporal Bodine
A Man Called Adam (1966) - Club Owner
A Time for Killing (1967) - Sgt. Cleehan
Marlowe (1969) - Sgt. Fred Beifus
Billy Jack (1971) - Deputy Mike
Terror in the Sky (1971) - Capt. Wilson
Ben (1972) - Engineer
The Candidate (1972) - Floyd J. Starkey
Rage (1972) - Col. Alan A. Nickerson
Walking Tall (1973) - Augie McCullah
Dirty Mary, Crazy Larry (1974) - Sheriff Carl Donahue
Homebodies (1974) - Construction Boss
The Missiles of October (1974) - Adm. George W. Anderson Jr., Chief of Naval Operations
The Wild McCullochs (1975) - Larry Carpenter
W.C. Fields and Me (1976) - Parker
Baby Blue Marine (1976) - Buick Driver
Gus (1976) - Asst. Warden
MacArthur (1977) - Admiral Halsey
Goodbye, Franklin High (1978) - Police Captain
Hero at Large (1980) - Firechief
Airplane! (1980) - Air Controller Neubauer
The Howling (1981) - Older Cop
Strange Invaders (1983) - Arthur Newman
Gremlins (1984) - Mobil Gas Station Attendant (uncredited)
The Lost Empire (1984) - Capt. Hendry
Innerspace (1987) - Man in Restroom
Big Top Pee-wee (1988) - Sheriff
Freeway (1988) - Monsignor Kavanaugh
Ghost Writer (1989) - Cop #2
Gremlins 2: The New Batch (1990) - Projectionist
Desire and Hell at Sunset Motel (1991) - Capt. Holiday
Honey, I Blew Up the Kid (1992) - Smitty
Single White Female (1992) - Desk Clerk
Body Shot (1994) - Arthur Lassen
Hellraiser: Bloodline (1996) - Hologram-Priest (uncredited)
The Naked Monster (2005) - Col. Patrick Hendry (final film role)
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esonetwork · 4 years ago
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'Cryptozoica' Book Review By Ron Fortier
New Post has been published on https://esonetwork.com/cryptozoica-book-review-by-ron-fortier/
'Cryptozoica' Book Review By Ron Fortier
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CRYPTOZOICA By Mark Ellis Cover & Interior Illustrations by Jeff Slemons Millennial Concepts 404 pgs
Mark Ellis is an accomplished writer with a long, impressive history of writing fantastic fiction. When we first heard of this book, a decade ago, we were intrigued. Having grown up reading lots of Lost World adventures from Conan Doyle to Burrough and Michael Crichton, we naturally wondered what Ellis would bring to the genre. Then, while at a local convention last year, we have the good fortune of sitting next to our friend, graphic artist Jeff Slemons. The same Jeff Slemons who had contributed the artwork to this massive tome and much to our delight he had copies for sale on his table. Months later, we’ve finally read “Cryptozoica” and find ourselves deliriously happy to have done so.
This book is wonderfully crafted right from the start with its tantalizing opening segment of Charles Darwin on his historical voyage aboard The Beagle to solve the mystery of evolution. The ship has found a strange island in the South China Sea occupied by creatures long thought extinct. When Darwin begins to speculate what this discovery will mean to the world, another member of the crew, Dr. Belleau argues the revelations themselves will actually stymie the progress of science allowing religious zealots to exploit the islands secret to their own prejudice ends. In the end the famous scientist acquiesces and for the next several centuries their discoveries are protected by a secret organization known as the School of Night.
With that introductory chapter out of the way, the story continues in our present time where three different parties are about to clash over the future of Big TamTung; the dinosaur island. The first is a wealthy financier with plans to turn the island into a tourist attraction and is represented by Americans “Tombstone” Jack Kavanaugh, his partner Augustus Crowe and their lovely Malaysian mechanic Mouzi. When several very rich patrons are killed on their first expedition, the entire enterprise is scuttled. The second interested group is the Bamboo Triad, a far reaching criminal organization represented by the beautiful Bai Suzhen and her rival, Jimmy Chao. Their own agenda concerns a mysterious substance supposedly residing at the center of the island and capable of altering the course of science and medicine forever. It is this fable Prima Materia that entices scientist Aubrey Belleau, great grandson of the Beagle’s medic to gamble everything he possesses to find it. Accompanying him is his deadly bodyguard, the brutish Hamish Oakshott and world renowned paleontologist Honore Roxton.
The first half of the book sets the table introducing the readers to this colorful cast with brief glimpses into their individual histories and the demons and dreams that will lead them to the dangers of the savage world. All of which kicks off in the second half and totally revs up the story’s pacing too full speed ahead. From their first encounter with a giant prehistoric crocodile, to blood-sucking leeches that fall from the trees, each page propels the action in a crazy non-stop ride that encompasses the best elements of all such pulp adventures.
Ellis is a brilliant writer and along with all the great pulp madness displayed, he also explores the origins of man with all its twists and turns, scientific facts and tons of unproven legends that have yet to be explored and revealed. All of which makes “Cryptozoica” a feast of plenty for all lovers of high octane adventure. Our only regret is it took us this long to find. Please do not make that same mistake.
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bonjourmoncher · 5 years ago
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Hamilton Lindley 
I'd like to introduce a man with a lot of charm, talent, and wit. Unfortunately, he couldn't be here tonight, so instead . . . - Melvin Helitzer I do not stand on protocol. If you just call me Excellency, it will be okay. - Hamilton P Lindley The number-one fear in life is public speaking, and the number-two fear is death. This means that if you go to a funeral, you're better off in the casket than giving the eulogy. - Jerry Seinfeld
At the end of a long introduction: You omitted perhaps one thing - that in 1974 I had a hemorrhoidectomy. - Howell Heflin My father gave me these hints on speech making: Be sincere ... be brief ... be seated. - Hamilton Philip Lindley
If any of you are related to our main guest, let me know so I can speak slowly. - Wendy Morgan As my mother used to say: "Mimic a duck act calm and unruffled on the surface, but paddle like crazy underneath." - Anonymous Some people might say that I think too highly of you just because I worship the water you walk on. - Anonymous As Spinoza, or someone very much like him, once said . . . - Judith Viorst Speeches are like steer horns - a point here, a point there, and a lot of bull in between. - Evelyn Anderson My job is to talk to you, and your job is to listen. If you finish first, please let me know. - Harry Hershfield
I don't want to be patronizing . . . that means "talking down."
- Wendy Morgan
I have only ten minutes and hardly know where to begin. voice in back: Begin at the ninth. - Jacob Braude
After such an introduction, I can hardly wait to hear what I'm going to say. - Evelyn Anderson Add to Favorite ListI was chosen to speak due to my warm personality. . . . Look up warm and it means "not so hot." - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListA speech that's full of sparkling wit will keep its hearer grinning, provided its end is close to its beginning. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListIt usually takes me more than three weeks to prepare a good impromptu speech. - Mark Twain Add to Favorite ListI'd like to tell you some jokes now, but you'd only laugh. - Milton Berle Add to Favorite ListThe recipe for a good speech includes some shortening. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListI was told to be accurate, be brief, and then be seated. ... So I promise I shall be brief as possible - no matter how long it takes me. - Willard Pearson Add to Favorite ListThank you for the privilege of speaking to you in this magnificent auditorium. You know the meaning of the word auditorium, don't you? It is derived from two Latin words, audio, "to hear," and taurus, "the bull." - Larry Wilde Add to Favorite ListI was chosen to speak today based on my senility. - Wendy Morgan Add to Favorite ListA toastmaster is a man who eats a meal he doesn't want so he can get up and tell a lot of stories he doesn't remember to people who've already heard them. - George Jessel Add to Favorite ListI'm an idealist: I don't know where I'm going but I'm on my way. - Carl Sandburg Add to Favorite ListWe noticed a crasher at the bar - that shows what a real man he is - he's here to show he's not ticked for not being asked. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListResponse to clapping: "Thank you for ovating." - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListI often quote myself. It adds spice to my conversation. - George Bernard Shaw Add to Favorite ListA bore is a man who spends so much time talking about himself that you can't talk about yourself. - Melville Landon Add to Favorite ListBuffet: A French word that means "get up and get it yourself." - Ron Dentinger Add to Favorite ListWit is the salt of conversation, not the food. - William Hazlitt Add to Favorite ListGood breeding consists in concealing how much we think of ourselves and how little we think of the other person. - Mark Twain Add to Favorite ListOn how to become a good speaker: Practice all the time. One of the best ways is to put a bunch of marbles in your mouth while you talk. Slowly but surely you take away a marble. And then, when you've lost all your marbles, you're a public speaker. - George Jessel Add to Favorite ListOnce you get people laughing, they're listening and you can tell them almost anything. - Herb Gardner Add to Favorite ListGoldie Hawn is funny, sexy, beautiful, talented, intelligent, warm, and consistently sunny. Other than that, she doesn't impress me at all. - Neil Simon Add to Favorite ListWhen I told her we were going to roast her, she said, "Of course, . . . they only crucify the innocent." - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListA lot of you want me to hurry through the introduction. That's because you're so much older you don't want to waste a minute of your life. - Wendy Morgan Add to Favorite ListEven more exasperating than the guy who thinks he knows it all is the one who really does. - Al Bernstein Add to Favorite ListWe will then hear from the founder of the Mayo Clinic, . . . Dr. Ted Clinic. - Dave Barry Add to Favorite ListThe first Rotarian was the first man to call John the Baptist Jack. - H. L. Mencken Add to Favorite ListWill the people in the cheaper seats clap your hands? All the rest of you, if you'll just rattle your jewelry. - John Lennon Add to Favorite ListAs one skeleton said to the other - if I had any guts I'd get the heck out of here. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListThanks for the nice introduction. Next to my resume, that's the closest I'll ever come to perfection. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListWe were worried that our main speaker wouldn't be able to make it tonight. But, fortunately, due to a hole in the prosecution's case . . . - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListI thought I'd begin by reading a poem by Shakespeare, but then I thought, Why should I? He never reads any of mine. - Spike Milligan Add to Favorite ListI hope you will excuse my being late. The person in this organization who gave me directions here has obviously heard me speak before. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListWhen I was preparing for this speech I asked my family for advice. One member replied, "There's a first time for everything, so try to be funny and brief." - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListMost experts suggest that one should open with a joke. Obviously, they've never heard me tell a joke. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListGood evening, ladies and gentlemen. I'm pleased to be with you. (Pause) That concludes my prepared remarks. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListI'm moving down here . . . because some of you in the back might not be able to hear my talk . . . and that wouldn't be fair to those who can hear it. - Anonymous Add to Favorite ListIt has been discovered experimentally that you can draw laughter from an audience anywhere in the world, of any class or race, simply by walking on a stage and uttering the words "I am a married man." - Ted Kavanaugh Add to Favorite ListThis gathering is what I call "intimate," which really means "Where is everybody?" - Tim Conway
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jcdevinejr · 6 years ago
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The Resistance Goes Nuclear
This is a column written in  frustration about the indefensible unfairness visited on Judge Kavanaugh in the recently completed Senate Judiciary Committee hearings. It defies any possibility for bipartisanship, bad news for us all./jcd
It was presidential candidate Bill Clinton who in early 1992 coined the phrase ‘politics of personal destruction’. Curiously (in retrospect) he was against it.
But he was on to something. Character assassination is today being deployed with frightening effect in the Democrats’ campaign to keep Judge Brett Kavanaugh off the Supreme Court. It’s working just fine, a near perfect tactic—were it not for the human carnage in its wake.
Kavanaugh is a judicial superstar. He has served for 12 years on the US Court of Appeals for the DC Circuit, the nation’s second highest court, amassing over 300 rulings, 13 of which have been used as a basis for Supreme Court decisions. By all accounts, he is a brilliant, reasonable and hard-working jurist.
Democrats had already vowed fierce opposition to whomever Trump nominated to replace retiring Justice Kennedy—the protest lines were manned and ready the night of his announcement—so it was a foregone conclusion that the nominee would be in for a bruising confirmation battle. But no one had any idea just how bruising and how personal it would become.
In two short months, Democratic senators, with media help, managed to paint Kavanaugh as a primal threat to our democracy, one who would protect Trump from impeachment and along the way single-handedly reverse Roe v. Wade.  Then, just days before the scheduled committee vote, they rolled out their big gun—an allegation of sexual assault by Kavanaugh, 36 years ago, when he was in high school. Ka-Boom!!
Since then, a Supreme Court nomination debate has morphed into a national catharsis on whether to believe Kavanaugh or his accuser, Dr. Christine Blasey Ford. Her testimony last week was emotionally compelling but provides little evidence—she cannot recall the time or place of the assault. Judge Kavanaugh’s unequivocal and impassioned denial was equally compelling.
The Democrats’ position is no secret: Kavanaugh is guilty. But let’s be clear. Their battle in the senate is not about women’s rights or protection of sexual assault victims; it is about blocking the nomination. Each Democratic senator is wrestling with the wholly political calculation of how to justify his or her predetermined vote against Kavanaugh, and how it will play out in the voting booths. The Ford allegation is simply a means to that end.
We don’t know yet if they will succeed. What we do know is that Judge Kavanaugh and his family have been horribly damaged. His reputation is forever tarnished. Polls indicate that roughly half of Americans now believe that this man—virtually unknown three months ago—is a vicious sexual predator.
That’s a tragedy; and I say that with no disrespect to Dr. Ford or her allegations. The #MeToo movement, constantly invoked as impetus for opposition to Kavanaugh, is a call for belief, respect and support of sexual abuse victims. That’s all good and it’s long overdue, but it is not—and cannot be—a basis for substituting blind belief for the innate fairness and due process that are the hallmarks of our democracy.
It is simply not possible to prove, without direct corroborating evidence, what did or did not happen 36 years ago. Therefore, there is no basis to presume that Brett Kavanaugh is guilty of the alleged offense. It is that simple, regardless of politics or popular opinion.
Meanwhile, the personal attacks continue. The new buzz is that Kavanaugh’s angry denials reveal a temperament not suited for the Supreme Court.  Baloney. A much better gauge of his judicial temperament is that which he’s displayed day in and day out in a dozen years on the nation’s second highest court. And anyone with a pulse would be outraged at being slandered and slimed in front of the entire nation.
Judge Kavanaugh is not the only one who’s angry. On Thursday, we saw South Carolina’s Senator Lindsay Graham in full fury—his emotional reaction to the behavior of his Democratic colleagues was obviously authentic; and it was particularly impactful because he is by nature steady and mild-mannered, often hammered by Republicans for being too conciliatory and too willing to work across the aisle.  
Senator Graham’s outburst was soundly criticized by the left and even lampooned by Saturday Night Live. That’s a good indicator that he struck home. He spoke from the heart, and it showed.
Senate confirmation of a president’s Supreme Court nomination is important. Rigorous challenge is expected. But baseless destruction of the nominee’s good name, and with it public respect and trust, is shameful. This is not the first time. It must stop.
Jack DeVine
October 2018
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drjackkavanaughart · 2 years ago
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Dr. Jack Kavanaugh, an internationally recognized surgeon and businessman who has spearheaded the commercialization of cellular therapies and emerging biotechnology firms has been named Chairman of Orbsen Therapeutics, it was announced today by Dr. Chris Coughlan, Founding Director. "Orbsen Therapeutics has developed cutting edge stem cell technology and is poised to become a leader.
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epistolizer · 3 years ago
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Hit & Run Commentary #137
A poll finds that 56% of Americans believe that the country is racist. Of Whites believing this, an additional poll should be taken to determine what number of these are willing to surrender their property, position, or profession to a minority having accomplished nothing more than having been born a minority.
Covid Liability Shield. That sounds like if you are mangled by a Plague cult elixir that you are not going to get a single cent.
Fraulein Bowser has decreed those traveling to and from the occupied capital territory must quarantine for 14 days. However, those doing so on essential business are not required to do so. It is claimed that regimes only impose plague edicts on the basis of science. As such, can it be explained how a non-sentient microbe is able to make a determination as to the nature of the ingress and egress related to a designed jurisdiction?
The Tea Party movement actually did consist of mothers, veterans, and grandparents. That didn't stop Congressional Democrats from badmouthing them up one side and down the other despite those particular activists not destroying a single piece of property.
We were told we must believe the allegations against Judge Kavanaugh because of the reliability of FBI statistics. As such, does that mean we should believe the FBI regarding Communist infiltration of the Civil Rights and Anti-war movements in the 1960's?
Fascinating the ones jacked out of shape that Trump might deliver his nomination oration from the White House on the grounds that such would possibly be illegal, unethical, and dishonor the solemnity of “the People’s House” don’t seem to have much of a problem with mobs unilaterally tearing down statues, setting buildings ablaze, and looting retailers.
So if those holding parties can be subjected to having their utilities turned off, why shouldn’t those at this time not paying their rent or mortgages be evicted?
The purpose of the mainstream media is apparently not so much about conveying information but about directing the receivers of such messages towards a predetermined conclusion. For example, one regularly sees headlines about Coronavirus skeptics or those openly flouting the restrictions surrounding such contracting the Plague. So where are the headlines detailing the plight of those that rigorously abide by all of the guidelines promulgated by the regime but still nevertheless find themselves stricken? For if these restrictions have been handed down by the high priests of deified science as the assured way to survive this microbial onslaught, isn’t that more of an example of the proverbial man bites dog than someone sickened by deliberative carelessness?
New York City has established checkpoints to force outsiders to quarantine for two weeks or to face fines of up to $10,000. So why is it acceptable to establish a perimeter surveillance largely based upon arbitrary executive fiat tracking actual Americans within their own country but an atrocity on the level of a war crime to enforce actual law at an international border or to build a wall there to facilitate the efficient implementation of such statutes?
In regards to a looming Cornoavirus vaccine, Fox News broadcaster Brian Kilmeade intoned that Americans just ought to go ahead and take the inoculation as soon as it is available. Does he intend to provide for the long term care of those permanently disabled as a result of an adverse reaction?
For daring to question the orthodoxy of the Plague Cult, Dr. Stella Immanuel is being discredited because of her unconventional beliefs regarding the implications of non-human intelligences. By such reasoning, does it then follow that Americans should refuse to go to a doctor of a Hindu background because of that religion’s tendency to ultimately deny the existence of differentiated physical reality?
In response to the destructive explosion in Beruit killing many and leaving even more homeless, foreign aide is being considered. But given the precarious state in which America finds itself, where exactly is this money supposed to come from? Just how much more will be seized from the taxpayer in the coming years to provide for a population that would just as easily like to see the United States brought to ruination or even destroyed?
Interesting that the one's condemning federal intervention to quell insurrections abetted by local authorities are now demanding a nationwide mask mandate.
So who exactly would impose a Biden national mask mandate? Wasn't it established in the case of Sheriff Joe Arpiao that it is constitutionally illegitimate and impermissible for local authorities to enforce federal laws, regulations or whatever one wants to call statutorily dubious decrees?
Interesting in their condemnation of "being pitted against one another", these Democratic ideologues aren't saying a tinkers flip about the violent insurrection looting and destroying property throughout America's cities.
Bloomberg says his favorite book as a child was “Johnny Tremain”. So that means he would view as heroic those that joined a guerilla war against the Biden regime?
Joe Biden says Trump is too angry. Unlike those the Democrats are unwilling to condemn, Trump did not loot property in American cities nor kick a motorist in the head.
Biden praising FDR for the New Deal. Some might argue that was when collectivist statism went full throttle.
Biden mentioning climate change. Interesting he didn’t mind orchestrating deals where his dimwit son Hunter earned a fortune from Ukrainian and Red Chinese fossil fuel companies.
Biden tossing a fit over the spread of Plague under Trump. Would have been worse had borders remained open to the extent Biden was calling for.
“Generously strong.” That means seizing your funds and sending them overseas.
By Frederick Meekins
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nanotechenergy · 4 years ago
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The AAA Car Doctor John Paul chats with Dr. Jack Kavanaugh, founder and CEO of Nanotech Energy about the most recent developments in electric vehicle battery technology.
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ryankavanaughus · 5 years ago
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dragoni · 6 years ago
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Fox, what about firing Tucker Carlson and your other privileged misogynists? 
"TO HELL with the notion that women must be believed no matter what",  Kevin Jackson
Radio host and Fox News contributor Kevin Jackson was fired from the network after he posted a series of offensive tweets Thursday, in which he slammed the women who have accused Judge Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct as "lying skanks."
Jack's vitriolic tweet storm came amid the Senate Judiciary Committee hearing in which where both Judge Kavanaugh and Dr. Christine Blasey Ford testified about one of the multiple sexual assault allegations raised against President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee.
"Kevin Jackson has been terminated as a contributor," a Fox spokesperson told multiple outlets Thursday night. "His comments on today’s hearings were reprehensible and do not reflect the values of FOX News."
The conservative, pro-Trump personality appeared on various shows on the network for years, including "Fox & Friends" and "Outnumbered."
#BoycottFox #BoycottFoxNews #BoycottFoxAdvertisers
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bloojayoolie · 6 years ago
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Politics, School, and Thank You: Amber Athey @amber_a... 8h None of you are getting a girlfriend out of this Jack Torres @JackTorres00 We walked out today because NOT all high school boys are rapists like#Kavanaugh and because, unlike the gop senate We #BelieveSurvivors Thank you Dr Christine Ford for standing up Show this thread 500 th746 4,291
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