Whats going on in the World

MORE MIS-INFORMATION!!! GOOD JOB!!

The child was taken into custody because her a-hole parent was part of an organized protest at the museum!!

The 9-year-old girl was given cookies and a drink at the precinct house as two female officers looked after her until her mother was processed, which took under three hours, according to Baker.

“There was absolutely no enforcement action taken against the child,” said Baker in response to online claims that the girl was arrested.

Baker added that the female cops “treated the girl as if she was their own” and was transported to the precinct house in a separate car.

The little girl can be seen in videos online walking out of the museum uncuffed, flanked by two female cops.

The two women and four men were all slapped with trespassing summonses.

by the NY POST...one of yours!!

Anti-vaxxers arrested after refusing to leave Museum of Natural History
Nice try but I’ll take the video proof over a Newspaper. No misinformation. Hauled off because they weren’t vaxed. No trespass.
 
Nice try but I’ll take the video proof over a Newspaper. No misinformation. Hauled off because they weren’t vaxed. No trespass.
maybe you don't get it...the child was taken into custody because her parent was arrested....look at your video and it shows exactly that, The ones who were arrested refused to leave the museum at closing time and one of them pissed in a bottle. The entire thing was a planned event. They refused to leave, that is called trespassing!!

"Nine year old arrested for not having vax ID while visiting a museum."

AGAIN THE CHILD WAS NOT ARRESTED...YOU LIED!

THEN WHEN YOU GET BUSTED you weasel out of it!! lol
 
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I’m walking the shopping district here, come across a small USA ?? on the ground… I said let me pick it and bring it home to wash…

20 minutes later, there are 2, WWII veterans waiting at a table…

I asked may a shake ya hand and thank you sir, SURE.!

I said I just found this USA ?? on the ground would I like it, Harry on the left said SURE.! he served in the Pacific…

Joe wit the WWII cap on the right was on Normandy D Day +2…

7CCD8506-5124-4202-BF7F-58B632A221ED.webp
8C603D4F-7008-480D-8EA4-F3B7BF5BB305.webp
541B4034-8950-4673-920E-BE3324CA6F72.webp
 
I’m walking the shopping district here, come across a small USA ?? on the ground… I said let me pick it and bring it home to wash…

20 minutes later, there are 2, WWII veterans waiting at a table…

I asked may a shake ya hand and thank you sir, SURE.!

I said I just found this USA ?? on the ground would I like it, Harry on the left said SURE.! he served in the Pacific…

Joe wit the WWII cap on the right was on Normandy D Day +2…

View attachment 43485View attachment 43486View attachment 43487
you're a good man..
 
maybe you don't get it...the child was taken into custody because her parent was arrested....look at your video and it shows exactly that, The ones who were arrested refused to leave the museum at closing time and one of them pissed in a bottle. The entire thing was a planned event. They refused to leave, that is called trespassing!!

"Nine year old arrested for not having vax ID while visiting a museum."

AGAIN THE CHILD WAS NOT ARRESTED...YOU LIED!

THEN WHEN YOU GET BUSTED you weasel out of it!! lol
Big Joe declares that less then that is being arrested. So she was arrested. She’s white too. Probably get a year or so without being charged, be labeled a white supremacist, and brought up on seditionist charges also. Made to give reparations to the arresting black officer for traumatic ptsd for the rest of her life.

Celly “Go Away” ?.
 
. So she was arrested. She’s white too.
wrong again!! not white!! Glad to see you out their defending black people for once!!

She's upset because her a-hole mother got arrested. The cops cannot leave her unattended...she was released to momma after her booking

53213707-10427451-image-a-30_1642783112630.jpg
 
wrong again!! not white!! Glad to see you out their defending black people for once!!

She's upset because her a-hole mother got arrested. The cops cannot leave her unattended...she was released to momma after her booking

53213707-10427451-image-a-30_1642783112630.jpg
OMG! YOU MEAN SHES BLACK! The racist in you. I’m using your leftist mentality. Just believe me like you believed Cuomo and Fredo ?

You’ve got to be one of the easiest tools I’ve ever learned to use ??
 
I’m walking the shopping district here, come across a small USA ?? on the ground… I said let me pick it and bring it home to wash…

20 minutes later, there are 2, WWII veterans waiting at a table…

I asked may a shake ya hand and thank you sir, SURE.!

I said I just found this USA ?? on the ground would I like it, Harry on the left said SURE.! he served in the Pacific…

Joe wit the WWII cap on the right was on Normandy D Day +2…

View attachment 43485View attachment 43486View attachment 43487
Some have no respect for veterans who provide them freedom to sit behind a screen and well, do what they do! :ROFLMAO: Ehhhhh
 
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can you imagine having to live under the threat?

Thank God we don't have hostile neighboring countries that could invade us. I think as Americans we can't process or even begin to understand the anxiety this must be causing for Ukrainians. We've never had to experience this type of senario in our history.

Ukrainians start to grapple with warnings that a Russian invasion is imminent​


1643067273684.png


Nevertheless, restaurants in the Ukrainian capital are full, nightlife venues are hopping, parties are in full swing and malls were bustling with weekend shoppers. “Clubs are open, programs and lineups are planned for the whole next season,” said Alisa Mullen, CEO at Strela Booking Agency, told Yahoo News. “Everything will stop only if there is a really serious threat,” and most people she knows “believe that under no circumstances will hostilities take place in Kyiv.”

Artur Mas, PR manager at Dontstop Agency, concurs. “The fairs, the plays, the nightlife continues,” he said. “Life goes on as usual, just with some COVID restrictions.”

Yet for a growing number of Kyiv residents, emergency backpacks with crucial documents, warm clothes and medical supplies are being stashed at their front doors in case of a sudden attack. Sober talks are taking place with families and friends mapping out possible getaway options — whether to the homes of relatives in Europe or to towns located in the western portion of the country, where Russian troops don’t yet pose an immediate threat. Lines are appearing at ATMs. International companies, like Japan Tobacco, are sending their employees home, and editorial boards of newspapers are beefing up their cybersecurity and discussing how to stay safe and report on the war should Russia invade, which, according to the U.S., is an increasingly likely scenario.

"We can’t imagine it exactly,” said Anna Babinets, regional editor for the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. “Will we have phones or the internet? Will we even have electricity?”

Babinets, her family and her co-workers are heeding the warnings coming from the U.S. that a Russian invasion may be imminent, and they increasingly believe that Kyiv itself with be a prime Russian target, contrary to earlier assessments that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s goal might be to expand in the east or the terrain around the Crimean Peninsula in the south, which has been Russian-occupied for nearly eight years.

“It’s looking very dangerous to us,” she said. “We understand that for Putin to control Ukraine, it’s not about seizing new regions, it’s not about enlarging the Donbas territories in the east,” where, since 2014, proxy fighters have been waging a civil war that’s killed 14,000. “Now they want to control Kyiv.” It’s an idea not shared by many in the capital, she conceded. “There aren’t a lot of people who are preparing or who think an invasion is even possible.”

Recovering from COVID, Kseniya Kharchenko, who works in book production at a Kyiv publishing house, became seriously worried about the safety of staying in the capital on Jan. 10, when bomb threats started being called in to schools in Kyiv. Nearly 200 threats have been made across Ukraine in just the past two weeks, causing evacuations, school closures and trauma among students and teachers. No explosive devices have yet been found, and Kharchenko said news reports indicate that the IPs on those emailed messages are coming from Russia. She believes the threats are Russian mind games designed to keep Ukrainians on edge.

And while she is not panicked, she is wondering if she should leave and worried about how COVID restrictions may affect her ability to evacuate. “I have a car, an apartment, I have my parents, my kid, my ex-husband — I have everything here,” she said. “So if I leave now, and then nothing happens, what will I find when I return? But if I stay here and something happens, then I might die.”

“That’s the main question — how do we know when to leave?” she added. “Because when it’s obvious it’s time to leave, all the borders may already be closed, no aircrafts operating, no cellphone connections. So when is the right time to leave, right now?”


Until last weekend, 30-something copywriter Maria Ivanova, who asked that her real name not be used for this article, had every intention of staying put in Kyiv. The cyberattack that took down 70 government sites two weeks ago was disturbing, but she didn’t worry too much. Even when the Ukrainian government in December called women engineers and medics to register for the draft, she wasn’t anxious. The Russian troops all but encircling Ukraine for months at first didn’t faze her. “We’ve all gotten used to [threats from Russia] because they’ve been going on for eight years,” she said.

But the arrival of tons of arms and anti-armor weapons, Javelins and Stingers — from the U.S., the U.K. and several European NATO countries — made her rethink her plans in the past few days. “The amount of weapons coming from the West to help Ukraine made me think this is serious.” Moved-up NATO exercises soon to start in the Baltic region and the Black Sea have only added to that anxiety.


Like many residents of Kyiv, Ivanova is debating her options. She’s considered heading to the Carpathian Mountains in the west of Ukraine, or leaving the country altogether.

Staying in Kyiv,” she explained, “it's not for the best option for me. If something happens here, like heavy bombarding, I don’t feel that I will survive personally in these conditions.”


She wonders about the thousands of World War II-era bomb shelters across the city, as the government has done little but to show where they are located on a map. “Are they equipped? Are they even open? Who holds the keys?” she asked.

This weekend, Ivanova settled on a plan, purchasing a ticket to fly to Spain on Jan. 31. If she’s able to get out before Russia rolls in, she plans to stay there for a month, until the situation in Ukraine cools down.

But others aren’t at all ready to make that leap.

“I don’t follow the news,” said singer/musician Ira Kushenko, explaining that it makes her too nervous. “I decided not to spoil my mood, since this is politics and they will figure it out without me.” On the one hand, she added, such an attitude “may be irresponsible, but on the other hand, it is much better than panicking and spreading unverified news,” which she suspects is “now pouring in from everywhere. We need to stay calm, I think.”

Betty Endale, who is part of the Afro-Ukrainian hip-hop group Fo Sho, has reached a breaking point. “We are frustrated by what is going on, and just trying to keep our peace,” she said. But what is happening in Ukraine she said is “giving me panic attacks.” Her family also plans to head to Spain, where the government is already talking about sending troops to fight in Ukraine, and which she’s heard is welcoming Ukrainian refugees, who are just starting to trickle in. According to estimates from Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov, if Russia does indeed invade, some 5 million Ukrainians may be seeking a new home in the West.


1643067522026.png

People celebrate the Day of Unity in Kyiv on Saturday. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)
 
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can you imagine having to live under the threat?

Thank God we don't have hostile neighboring countries that could invade us.
I think as Americans we can't process or even begin to understand the anxiety this must be causing for Ukrainians. We've never had to experience this type of senario in our history.

Ukrainians start to grapple with warnings that a Russian invasion is imminent​


View attachment 43542

Nevertheless, restaurants in the Ukrainian capital are full, nightlife venues are hopping, parties are in full swing and malls were bustling with weekend shoppers. “Clubs are open, programs and lineups are planned for the whole next season,” said Alisa Mullen, CEO at Strela Booking Agency, told Yahoo News. “Everything will stop only if there is a really serious threat,” and most people she knows “believe that under no circumstances will hostilities take place in Kyiv.”

Artur Mas, PR manager at Dontstop Agency, concurs. “The fairs, the plays, the nightlife continues,” he said. “Life goes on as usual, just with some COVID restrictions.”

Yet for a growing number of Kyiv residents, emergency backpacks with crucial documents, warm clothes and medical supplies are being stashed at their front doors in case of a sudden attack. Sober talks are taking place with families and friends mapping out possible getaway options — whether to the homes of relatives in Europe or to towns located in the western portion of the country, where Russian troops don’t yet pose an immediate threat. Lines are appearing at ATMs. International companies, like Japan Tobacco, are sending their employees home, and editorial boards of newspapers are beefing up their cybersecurity and discussing how to stay safe and report on the war should Russia invade, which, according to the U.S., is an increasingly likely scenario.

"We can’t imagine it exactly,” said Anna Babinets, regional editor for the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. “Will we have phones or the internet? Will we even have electricity?”

Babinets, her family and her co-workers are heeding the warnings coming from the U.S. that a Russian invasion may be imminent, and they increasingly believe that Kyiv itself with be a prime Russian target, contrary to earlier assessments that Russian President Vladimir Putin’s goal might be to expand in the east or the terrain around the Crimean Peninsula in the south, which has been Russian-occupied for nearly eight years.

“It’s looking very dangerous to us,” she said. “We understand that for Putin to control Ukraine, it’s not about seizing new regions, it’s not about enlarging the Donbas territories in the east,” where, since 2014, proxy fighters have been waging a civil war that’s killed 14,000. “Now they want to control Kyiv.” It’s an idea not shared by many in the capital, she conceded. “There aren’t a lot of people who are preparing or who think an invasion is even possible.”

Recovering from COVID, Kseniya Kharchenko, who works in book production at a Kyiv publishing house, became seriously worried about the safety of staying in the capital on Jan. 10, when bomb threats started being called in to schools in Kyiv. Nearly 200 threats have been made across Ukraine in just the past two weeks, causing evacuations, school closures and trauma among students and teachers. No explosive devices have yet been found, and Kharchenko said news reports indicate that the IPs on those emailed messages are coming from Russia. She believes the threats are Russian mind games designed to keep Ukrainians on edge.

And while she is not panicked, she is wondering if she should leave and worried about how COVID restrictions may affect her ability to evacuate. “I have a car, an apartment, I have my parents, my kid, my ex-husband — I have everything here,” she said. “So if I leave now, and then nothing happens, what will I find when I return? But if I stay here and something happens, then I might die.”

“That’s the main question — how do we know when to leave?” she added. “Because when it’s obvious it’s time to leave, all the borders may already be closed, no aircrafts operating, no cellphone connections. So when is the right time to leave, right now?”


Until last weekend, 30-something copywriter Maria Ivanova, who asked that her real name not be used for this article, had every intention of staying put in Kyiv. The cyberattack that took down 70 government sites two weeks ago was disturbing, but she didn’t worry too much. Even when the Ukrainian government in December called women engineers and medics to register for the draft, she wasn’t anxious. The Russian troops all but encircling Ukraine for months at first didn’t faze her. “We’ve all gotten used to [threats from Russia] because they’ve been going on for eight years,” she said.

But the arrival of tons of arms and anti-armor weapons, Javelins and Stingers — from the U.S., the U.K. and several European NATO countries — made her rethink her plans in the past few days. “The amount of weapons coming from the West to help Ukraine made me think this is serious.” Moved-up NATO exercises soon to start in the Baltic region and the Black Sea have only added to that anxiety.


Like many residents of Kyiv, Ivanova is debating her options. She’s considered heading to the Carpathian Mountains in the west of Ukraine, or leaving the country altogether.

Staying in Kyiv,” she explained, “it's not for the best option for me. If something happens here, like heavy bombarding, I don’t feel that I will survive personally in these conditions.”


She wonders about the thousands of World War II-era bomb shelters across the city, as the government has done little but to show where they are located on a map. “Are they equipped? Are they even open? Who holds the keys?” she asked.

This weekend, Ivanova settled on a plan, purchasing a ticket to fly to Spain on Jan. 31. If she’s able to get out before Russia rolls in, she plans to stay there for a month, until the situation in Ukraine cools down.

But others aren’t at all ready to make that leap.

“I don’t follow the news,” said singer/musician Ira Kushenko, explaining that it makes her too nervous. “I decided not to spoil my mood, since this is politics and they will figure it out without me.” On the one hand, she added, such an attitude “may be irresponsible, but on the other hand, it is much better than panicking and spreading unverified news,” which she suspects is “now pouring in from everywhere. We need to stay calm, I think.”

Betty Endale, who is part of the Afro-Ukrainian hip-hop group Fo Sho, has reached a breaking point. “We are frustrated by what is going on, and just trying to keep our peace,” she said. But what is happening in Ukraine she said is “giving me panic attacks.” Her family also plans to head to Spain, where the government is already talking about sending troops to fight in Ukraine, and which she’s heard is welcoming Ukrainian refugees, who are just starting to trickle in. According to estimates from Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov, if Russia does indeed invade, some 5 million Ukrainians may be seeking a new home in the West.


View attachment 43543
People celebrate the Day of Unity in Kyiv on Saturday. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

For sure. feel bad for them.
Like I feel bad for our southern border in the US being infiltrated by Central American unvaccinated migrants. 50K-100K of them a month crossing the border illegally. Gangs bringing in drugs and are all about violence.

Can you imagine what that is doing to our citizens on the border who defend us? Or the folks in cities there and across America that are now seeing an influx in their neighborhoods of these illegals being flown in at 1am under the cover of darkness?

But who cares about that sh!t? Right?

Probably not in Onancock.
 
For sure. feel bad for them.
Like I feel bad for our southern border in the US being infiltrated by Central American unvaccinated migrants. 50K-100K of them a month crossing the border illegally. Gangs bringing in drugs and are all about violence.

Can you imagine what that is doing to our citizens on the border who defend us? Or the folks in cities there and across America that are now seeing an influx in their neighborhoods of these illegals being flown in at 1am under the cover of darkness?

But who cares about that sh!t? Right?

Probably not in Onancock.
Could not have said it better!!
 
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