The Federal Government and Gaslighting Queens in the FDA, NIH, FBI, IRS, CDC, CIA, NSA gaslighting its citizens. That's what they do; that's who they are.
Her name is Nina Jankowicz. She probably got the appointment by President Joe Biden to lead the Department of Homeland Security's Disinformation Governance Board because she's shown that she can play ball on behalf of the Biden Administration.
A Bryn Mawr graduate who worked for the National Democratic Institute, which is heavily funded by the National Endowment for Democracy, which spurred perennial controversy for interfering in foreign elections.
She scoffed at the Hunter Biden laptop being of legitimate concern. Her appointment is a further attack on free speech.
In October 2020, after The New York Post exposed damning emails and other information in Hunter Biden’s laptop, Jankowicz scoffed at the laptop controversy: “We should view it as a Trump campaign product.”
She’s perfect! She is the incarnate Spirit of the Age who also embodies the aovto accompanyuent woke white women that are the Democrats’ main base now. https://t.co/GomddFIWOq
— Steve Deace (@SteveDeaceShow) April 29, 2022
Julie Andrews she is not. She's riffing on the Mary Poppins' song Supercalifragilistic expialidocious, from the 1964 Disney movie set in 1910 London. Though I saw the movie as a kid, I didn't really know the plot except for a nanny coming into a family to help organize them. Wikipedia explains it this way, that Mary Poppins
visits a dysfunctional family in London and employs her unique brand of lifestyle to improve the family's dynamic.
What is it with these federal agencies that reviving 1960s songs to hypnotize boomers into childlike complacency? Back in December 2021, former NIH Director and Catholic, Francis Collins (who cannot honor the 9th Commandment and the sanctity of truth), mocked boomers by way of parody with the 1963 song based on a children's story, "Puff, the Magic Dragon," a song about an ageless dragon. Wikipedia provides some background on the song,
The lyrics for "Puff, the Magic Dragon" are based on a 1959 poem by Leonard Lipton, then a 19-year-old Cornell University student.[1] Lipton was inspired by an Ogden Nash poem titled "Custard the Dragon", about a "realio, trulio little pet dragon".
Here is what interested me.
The lyrics tell a story of the ageless dragon Puff and his playmate, Jackie Paper, a little boy who grows up and loses interest in the imaginary adventures of childhood and leaves Puff to be with himself. The story of the song takes place "by the sea" in the fictional land of "Honah Lee".
But Collins' version does not mean he is celebrating an ageless dragon but that he is using the word and name Puff more as an incantation to give a ruse and a con the feeling of magic trick that has concludes with a "poof," a near rhyme to Puff. There's puff (to expel and to inhale smoke), a puff piece (exaggerated praise), puff (as in "to swell"). And with the ever present MI6 in the U.S. State Department, it should come as no surprise that the government treats its people like gullible children with children's stories and song. Nor can I ignore the near rhyme of poof. Though the fiery dragon may be ageless, the effects of the vaccines are not. In fact, the contents of the vaccines accelerate aging.
Bizarre, I will admit, but at least she's better than listening to CDC Director Wolensky or scarf-wearing NIH nitwit, Debra Birx.
kooky https://t.co/yLvFUiTgJG
— John Harwood (@JohnJHarwood) April 29, 2022
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