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originally posted by: Thoughtful1
a reply to: fringeofthefringe
Dr. Jill should know better after all she is a doctor.
Have you noticed the yard signs have changed the wording from "Trust the Science" to "Science is Real"?
I wonder what type of science was used when they whipped up the Covid jabs?
That author (Arkin) writes a lot of these types of articles for Newsweek.
In a major calamity, when all hell breaks loose, where the question of presidential succession is paramount, the most powerful person in the country could be an unassuming retired U.S. Navy captain named Paul J. Jackson.
Jackson has worked for the White House Military Office (WHMO), on and off, for over 25 years. He was director of Presidential Contingency Programs starting in the Clinton administration and then rose to become the director of policy, plans and requirements, a position he held from June 1995 until May 2014, resuming that same position again under President Joe Biden. The powers he wields are based on more than a half-century of continuously revised Top Secret classified presidential directives, all buried by special access programs that shield continuity program even from most of the highest-level officials in the White House.
Those special access programs (and there are multiple offshoots) involve everything from successor protection and evacuation, movement, and connectivity to the levers of civil government, military command and nuclear weapons decision-making. The so-called National Mission Force – constituted largely of special operators from the Joint Special Operations Command and national-level assets form the FBI and Department of Justice – provide most of the tactical oomph to implement these programs, while WHMO logisticians and White House Communications Agency communicators keep the president (and the vice president) in the loop.
....
We are told to believe – in the absence of legislation or publicly available directives – that the WHMO not only has worked its way through what's supposed to happen, but will do so in strict compliance with the Constitution. We don’t know the protocols for staff to determine whether a president is unable, cognitively or otherwise, to order the commencement of a military operation.
We don’t know – and Congress doesn’t either – how presidential continuity is preserved when the Cabinet is incapacited.
There are good reasons to keep some of this information secret, but there is no acceptable reason to keep the basic principles from everyone outside of WHMO. Few have heard of Paul Jackson or his boss, and that in itself should get you wondering what function the secrecy really serves.
The Secret Powers Of WHMO and The "Continuity Of The Presidency" Programs
originally posted by: watchitburn
a reply to: Justoneman
One is probably his personal passport and the other is most likely his official government passport (they are a red or Burgundy color)
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Justoneman FlyingFox
Here is the pic of the inside of Heche's car. Does that look burned to ya'll? This is just very bizarre to me.
originally posted by: Ektar
a reply to: Caled
What if you have a green passport? Me first one as a kid was blue & the new one
I got ~ 90' or 91 ?
Cheers
Ektar
originally posted by: Caled
Someone messed up.
In the earlier picture you can see the factory airbag tag was removed. They don't grow back after an accident. Even if it was stuffed in the glovebox for the earlier picture, after the crash it only would have popped out if the glovebox came open.
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Justoneman FlyingFox
Here is the pic of the inside of Heche's car. Does that look burned to ya'll? This is just very bizarre to me.
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Justoneman FlyingFox
Here is the pic of the inside of Heche's car. Does that look burned to ya'll? This is just very bizarre to me.
originally posted by: cimmerius
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Justoneman FlyingFox
Here is the pic of the inside of Heche's car. Does that look burned to ya'll? This is just very bizarre to me.
It’s worth noting that she didn’t die from burns specifically. She died from anoxic brain injury due to significant pulmonary injury requiring medical ventilation (and burns that required surgical intervention). Her brain was starved of oxygen due to lung injury.
That is not surprising. My understanding is she sat in the car for quite some time while firefighters put out enough of the surrounding fire to allow her removal. Fire victims often die of smoke inhalation even when not burned at all.
“Inhalation injury is a nonspecific term that refers to damage to the respiratory tract or lung tissue from heat, smoke, or chemical irritants carried into the airway during inspiration.” (Google)
What does puzzle me a little is that doctors were able to pump enough oxygen into her to keep her body “alive” to sort out organ donation even after her brain shut down.
But that’s just medical details I don’t understand. The brain is probably the organ most sensitive to oxygen deprivation by far.
.
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Caled
See the space between the passenger side seat and the console on the pic you posted? Is that red hair from the wig? If it is could it have gone further down in the space when the car crashed?
An Air Force captain with top secret security clearance vanished. He resurfaced 35 years later
Former Air Force Capt. William Howard Hughes Jr. disappeared in 1983, and was found in 2018, but the exact details for why he deserted are still unknown.
But according to one reporter, Hughes’ name was still on the minds of U.S. intelligence officials. In 1986, Tad Szulc, an acclaimed reporter credited with first reporting the CIA’s involvement in the 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba, wrote an article saying that U.S. intelligence officers believed Hughes may have had something to do with recent high-profile rocket ship explosions. In 1985, a French rocket blew up shortly after liftoff, and in 1986, the Challenger space shuttle exploded shortly after liftoff over Florida, killing the 7 crew members aboard. Both the Challenger and two other spacecraft which failed around that time were carrying U.S. surveillance satellites, and those failures meant the U.S. could not keep an eye on Russia’s nuclear deployment, SFGate reported.
Szulc’s Pentagon unnamed sources saw “a clear link between Hughes and possible sabotage of the American and French launches,” the reporter said in his Los Angeles Times article. “He is worth his weight in gold to the Russians.”
originally posted by: carewemust
a reply to: Justoneman
I borrowed and reposted that MEME in a couple of relevant ATS threads. ATS gets lots of visitors hourly.
originally posted by: Caled
All excellent points. I'm just intrigued by the fact that she sat up and tried to escape with that level of brain damage.
originally posted by: cimmerius
originally posted by: RookQueen
a reply to: Justoneman FlyingFox
Here is the pic of the inside of Heche's car. Does that look burned to ya'll? This is just very bizarre to me.
It’s worth noting that she didn’t die from burns specifically. She died from anoxic brain injury due to significant pulmonary injury requiring medical ventilation (and burns that required surgical intervention). Her brain was starved of oxygen due to lung injury.
That is not surprising. My understanding is she sat in the car for quite some time while firefighters put out enough of the surrounding fire to allow her removal. Fire victims often die of smoke inhalation even when not burned at all.
“Inhalation injury is a nonspecific term that refers to damage to the respiratory tract or lung tissue from heat, smoke, or chemical irritants carried into the airway during inspiration.” (Google)
What does puzzle me a little is that doctors were able to pump enough oxygen into her to keep her body “alive” to sort out organ donation even after her brain shut down.
But that’s just medical details I don’t understand. The brain is probably the organ most sensitive to oxygen deprivation by far.
.