Wednesday, September 6, 2023

Get The Hell Out Of New York. Not for the decay. Not even for the crime. For the fact that it is a PROSECUTION FACTORY, & juries there will bankrupt you for everything you own for posting memes online, defending yourself against journalists, or just crossing the street.

2021 HIT SONG: "You Can Stick Your Vaccine Mandates Up Your Ass"

This video is from 2021, but it's a good one to instruct any newcomers to the Covid Con on how to respect anyone forcing anything on you.  Certainly, the phrase isn't owned by anyone, it can't be.  Its language that we all use or which is certainly available to us to use.  But there have been a few songs that have commandeered the phrase unto popular lyrics.  One is "Shove It Up Your Ass" by Mistreat.  Another is "Big Bill Hells, (Fuck You, Baltimore)," but I am sure there's a Celtic version thereabouts.

Bill Gates buys $95 Million worth of Anheuser-Busch shares following Bud Light disaster

Thank you to Steve Bartin

I was never a fan of Budweiser.  Busch wasn't terrible.  I liked Coors, an occasional Lowenbrau, or the Mexican beer Tecate or Dos Equis.  Newcastle was probably the last beer I bought.  But it is interesting to see how far from working-class values Anheuser-Busch has fallen since 1980.  

Read a little of its history.

In 1860, the brewery was purchased on the brink of bankruptcy by William D'Oench, a local pharmacist, and Eberhard Anheuser, a prosperous German-born soap manufacturer.[14][16][15] D'Oench was the silent partner in the business until 1869 when he sold his half-interest in the company.[14] From 1860 to 1875, the brewery was known as E. Anheuser & Co., and from 1875 to 1879 as the E. Anheuser Company's Brewing Association.[14]

Adolphus Busch, a wholesaler who had immigrated to St. Louis from Germany in 1857, married Eberhard Anheuser's daughter, Lilly, in 1861. Following his service in the American Civil War, Busch began working as a salesman for the Anheuser Brewery.[17][15] Busch purchased D'Oench's share of the company in 1869, and he assumed the role of company secretary from that time until the death of his father-in-law.[17]

Enrique Tarrio was sentenced to 22 years over a riot he did not attend, while Nick Fuentes, who was present for the Jan 6 Capitol [protest], avoided charges . . .

Ibuprofen is more dangerous than ivermectin