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Hogan and his Korean-born wife Yumi worked with South Korean authorities over 22 days to secure half a million tests for his state after conflict between governors and the Trump administration about the level of testing being made available.
The tests landed at Baltimore-Washington International Airport on April 18 where Hogan revealed the National Guard and state police had established a 'Fort Knox' like protection over them.
This was the first Korean Air plane to ever land in the airport as the governor said he wanted to avoid the tests having to cross over state lines because of previous reports of the federal government interjecting to confiscate equipment.
originally posted by: EnigmaChaser
So I find this whole thing kind of odd....
www.dailymail.co.uk...
Hogan and his Korean-born wife Yumi worked with South Korean authorities over 22 days to secure half a million tests for his state after conflict between governors and the Trump administration about the level of testing being made available.
The tests landed at Baltimore-Washington International Airport on April 18 where Hogan revealed the National Guard and state police had established a 'Fort Knox' like protection over them.
So that’s odd but this is what really made me think it’s all a little weird:
This was the first Korean Air plane to ever land in the airport as the governor said he wanted to avoid the tests having to cross over state lines because of previous reports of the federal government interjecting to confiscate equipment.
So you’re telling me that a plane from Korea - a very large plane at that - flew into US airspace to an airport that the airline has NEVER flown to and no one asked any questions while in the middle of a “global pandemic”??? I find that real hard to believe period and definitely right now. Never mind now I have questions about where customs or Fed agencies would have needed to get involved due to this being and international flight with cargo.
To me, this incident looks like a sham in a big way. It’s way too much of a production and hyperbolic - they wanted attention on this. Which is odd if your entire plan was to hide tests from the Feds.... And fits far to conveniently with the msm narratives...
originally posted by: EnigmaChaser
So I find this whole thing kind of odd....
www.dailymail.co.uk...
Hogan and his Korean-born wife Yumi worked with South Korean authorities over 22 days to secure half a million tests for his state after conflict between governors and the Trump administration about the level of testing being made available.
The tests landed at Baltimore-Washington International Airport on April 18 where Hogan revealed the National Guard and state police had established a 'Fort Knox' like protection over them.
So that’s odd but this is what really made me think it’s all a little weird:
This was the first Korean Air plane to ever land in the airport as the governor said he wanted to avoid the tests having to cross over state lines because of previous reports of the federal government interjecting to confiscate equipment.
So you’re telling me that a plane from Korea - a very large plane at that - flew into US airspace to an airport that the airline has NEVER flown to and no one asked any questions while in the middle of a “global pandemic”??? I find that real hard to believe period and definitely right now. Never mind now I have questions about where customs or Fed agencies would have needed to get involved due to this being and international flight with cargo.
To me, this incident looks like a sham in a big way. It’s way too much of a production and hyperbolic - they wanted attention on this. Which is odd if your entire plan was to hide tests from the Feds.... And fits far to conveniently with the msm narratives...
originally posted by: EnigmaChaser
a reply to: chr0naut
All fair points.
But how does that explain an international flight getting in here without questions being asked?
originally posted by: EnigmaChaser
a reply to: chr0naut
All fair points.
But how does that explain an international flight getting in here without questions being asked?
originally posted by: GreenGunther
a reply to: chr0naut
Because Apple realises 5g is pretty unnecessary from a technological perspective.
It’s just an excuse for service providers to justify pricing and Apple aren’t falling for it.
They won’t put tech in their phones unless there’s a reason to.
I buy data by the gigabyte. About $6 per GB.
With 5G my $6 worth of data would disappear in a few seconds..
originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: GreenGunther
a reply to: chr0naut
Because Apple realises 5g is pretty unnecessary from a technological perspective.
It’s just an excuse for service providers to justify pricing and Apple aren’t falling for it.
They won’t put tech in their phones unless there’s a reason to.
I buy data by the gigabyte. About $6 per GB.
With 5G my $6 worth of data would disappear in a few seconds..
You are kidding. Do you still use dial-up? Of course 1GB of data would transfer in seconds. That's sort of the point. And the pricing you pay for data transfer is sort of arbitrary. I mean, all the carriers do is switch on your connection and then make as much as they can from that particularly onerous piece of "hard labour".
originally posted by: GreenGunther
originally posted by: chr0naut
originally posted by: GreenGunther
a reply to: chr0naut
Because Apple realises 5g is pretty unnecessary from a technological perspective.
It’s just an excuse for service providers to justify pricing and Apple aren’t falling for it.
They won’t put tech in their phones unless there’s a reason to.
I buy data by the gigabyte. About $6 per GB.
With 5G my $6 worth of data would disappear in a few seconds..
You are kidding. Do you still use dial-up? Of course 1GB of data would transfer in seconds. That's sort of the point. And the pricing you pay for data transfer is sort of arbitrary. I mean, all the carriers do is switch on your connection and then make as much as they can from that particularly onerous piece of "hard labour".
Not dial up no, stable fibre.
4g for mobile, never required anything more.
Please keep in mind that 5g has extremely poor penetration capabilities, basically anything between you and the base station will cause you to drop signal. Taking that and the amount of base stations required to cover an area I re-iterate my first statement, it’s just a way for mobile operators to justify pricing.
Apple is interested in wifi 6, because they know the future is based off of fibre and wireless access points.
5g in practical terms is a waste of resources.