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All this talk about ice cubes has me thirsty for a bourbon on the rocks.

Me with Fallout: New Vegas, Skyrim, and Star Sector.

Technicals are over-rated. I want a bear named Maurice with a .50 and a saddle.

@lovelymiss @theshortbus Therein lies the rub. White Folks are the only race of men who care for animals. What can be done to retain this noble trait and still maintain a healthy distrust of the other races? When I figure that out I'll be Kang Shiplap The First...
I'm not upset that the government was giving free money to my enemies
I'm upset that the government WASN'T giving free money to ME
Doctors have always used patients for medical experiments often without their informed consent. Dr. Vernon Coleman gives a few tips on how you can tell if your doctor is experimenting on you.

Despite the horrors of well-known incidences in the past such as the experiments carried out on prisoners before and during World War II in Nazi Germany and Japan, the CIA’s MKUltra project which began in the 1950s and British teaching hospitals in the 1960s treating their patients with as much respect as lab rats (and sometimes killing them in the process), doctors experimenting on patients without their knowledge continues to this day.

In the USA, for example, the Alliance For Human Research Protection noted that “since the FDA issued a waiver of informed consent for emergency research, there have been at least 41 trials involving 46,964 patients. Of these, 96% were enrolled without their knowledge or informed consent.”

In 2017, American historian of medicine Alice Dreger wrote an article titled ‘You might be in a medical experiment and not even know it’ in which she cites examples in America of experimentation on patients without their knowledge. She wrote:

Today, more and more medical experimenters in the United States appear to circumvent getting the voluntary, informed consent of those whose bodies are being used for research. What’s more, rather than fighting this retrograde trend, some of the most powerful actors in medical research are defending it as necessary to medical progress.

The tenets of the Nuremberg Code were not meant only for Nazis. If Nazis presented the only danger to people being used for medical experiments, eliminating the Nazis would have solved our problems. The Nuremberg Code was written to guide all of us, because good intentions are not enough.

https://expose-news.com/2025/02/06/how-to-tell-if-your-doctor-is-trying-out-a-new-drug/
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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.