Sunday 'Stack Attack - EV Horrors, Globalist Pandemic Madness, Boosters, Celebrities Dying Suddenly, British Police Cowardice, The Birth Gap
Carpet bombing your inbox with explosive Substacks every Sunday. Take cover! Truth bombs are falling...
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Matthieu
Yesterday was Veterans Day and Stacker Heather B. wrote a wonderful tribute to her dad. He was a decorated army veteran, and you’ll enjoy Heather’s storytelling. Includes two poems:
Amy Sukwan writes, “A Lot of High-Profile Celebrities Have Recently Dropped. Were They Among the Small Percentage Who Got the Newest Jab?”
Without hesitation, my answer is “YES!”
She continues: “Now that we are back in flu/Covid season, with constant pushes for jabs falling on increasingly deaf ears, could those smaller numbers lining up for the boosters provide a clearer statistical signal? I mean if only a small number of celebrities, say, quietly lined up for their latest shot, and it is those same ones who are dropping dead just a short time later, wouldn’t somebody in Hollyweird be smart enough to connect it behind closed doors?”
One of the many reasons I will never, and could never be a conservative is my empathy for the underclass. The unwashed masses. The common riff-raff. The ones looked down upon by the upper middle class, and despised by the eugenicist elite. The ones who’ll never own a stock option or achieve membership at the local country club.
It’s natural for me to feel this way. To quote the great Ambrose Bierce, I came from poor because of honest stock. My mother’s family was so poor they used to send the kids to the garden parties in the better part of town, where they’d sneak in after the event and forage for loose change that had been dropped on the lawn. My father’s family was even more poverty stricken. No heat in their rotating apartments. Ice on the walls in winter. They were evicted so often that my father would come home from school to find a note with his new address posted on the door. Six boys slept in one bed. My grandmother still managed to be a fantastic cook. If the rumors about her having boyfriends is true, I can’t really blame her. They say she wore no underwear. Maybe she couldn’t afford it. My next book- “My grandmother was a floozy.”
“Think I am crazy? Read the proposed pandemic treaty--or just 2 slides I posted earlier tonight which demand the finding and sharing of new potential pandemic pathogens.”
On my recent trip to I made the fateful decision to rent a Kia Nero EV. I was in a rush to book the car for a work trip that would take me out of town for about a month. As I was browsing options on Cheaptickets and dreading the cost of a monthly car rental, I saw that Hertz was offering a 40% discount on electric vehicle (EV) rentals compared to internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles, making them look like a compelling option. While I took the plunge to try my first EV, I had a nagging feeling that this would turn out to be a mess…
Critics say cops aren't enforcing the law fairly. Cops say they are scared to.
How Isaac Weishaupt ended up on Substack after owning a blog since 2011 and building quite a following.
Here’s a cliff notes version of his story from organic blogger with 76K YouTube subscribers to his struggles through cancel culture and Big Tech, to now:
Only one in ten women actually don’t want children. One in ten is infertile, but the rest who don’t have children and that is one-third of us and counting, wanted them. By the time they are in their 40’s and incapable, badly.
Steven F Shaw searches for answers in Birth Gap, his masterwork documentary, the first part of which you can watch here. The most obvious is that they waited too long, thinking it was possible, their ‘career’ taking precedence. He interviews two prominent women in their late 30’s, both journalists. One of whom has a child, and having had one, wanted more but it was too late. “No one told us,” she said. Throughout her childhood and education, no one told her that the hammer would come down, that fertility drops off a cliff in your 30’s. That if you are 30 and childless, there is a 50% chance you won’t have children. The other, Megan McArdle, who writes for the Washington Post, left it too late. McArdle is a brilliant woman. If she didn’t know she was playing with fire, who could?
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