by Scott Pinsker, PJ Media:

Post-1976, every single presidential election has either had a Bush, a Clinton, or a Biden (or a combination thereof) somewhere on the ticket. And that’s a 45+-year timeframe of 12 different presidential elections! So, yeah – in American politics, institutional momentum and a politician’s long-term brand identification means a helluva lot.
Eventually, however, all brand identities will mutate. Brand IDs aren’t fixed, static things; they’re constantly evolving – or devolving – and over time, they transform into something dimensionally different from what they once were. For thousands of years, the swastika was a Hindu symbol of good fortune that was wholly disconnected from abhorrent theories of racism, white power, or Nazism. Not so much anymore. And less than 40 years ago, the Battle Flag of the Army of Northern Virginia, a.k.a. the Confederate Flag, was innocuous enough to adorn the roof of an orange Dodge Charger on a kids’ Friday night TV show. Today, there’s not a single TV executive who’d greenlight a kids’ show with protagonists associating themselves with Confederate symbology. Not even in the Deep South (Although they’d approve of it for the villains, of course).



The US Army labeled pro-life organizations “terrorist groups” during an anti-terrorism brief at Fort Bragg earlier this week.

Forget what you’ve been told in the past about your skin acting as a barrier to protect you from exposure to toxins as a new study shows that the dangerous “forever chemicals” per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are absorbed through the skin at much higher levels than once believed.

In a Senate hearing Thursday, ex-CDC Director Robert Redfield said mRNA COVID-19 vaccines are “toxic” and should not have been mandated. He also called for a pause on gain-of-function research.



