Ninety miles from the South Eastern tip of the United States, Liberty has no stead. In order for Liberty to exist and thrive, Tyranny must be identified, recognized, confronted and extinguished.
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Saturday, May 22, 2021
Fake Florida Whistleblower Rebekah Jones Admits Entire Operation Was A Hoax
Rebekah Jones, the Florida COVID-19 “whistleblower who wasn’t,” conceded Thursday that her entire operation to frame health officials with manipulating pandemic data was a hoax when she admitted she was never asked to delete deaths in the database.
“Deleting deaths was never something I was asked to do,” Jones wrote in a since-deleted post captured and published by National Review’s Charles C. W. Cooke. “I’ve never claimed it was.”
As outlined by Cooke, who chronicled her lucrative scam here, however, she did claim health officials told her to delete pandemic data quite a few times, a supposed bombshell revelation aimed to tank the credibility of the state’s triumphant performance under its Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis.
Below is another deleted post, published in National Review, where Jones accused Florida Deputy Secretary of Health Dr. Shamarial Roberson of instructing Jones “to delete cases and deaths,” the entire premise of the whistleblower story.
Cooke explains:
As part of the 10,000 word screed Jones wrote after my piece was published, she linked to a snippet of code that shows clearly that her dashboard did not interact directly with the state’s database, but instead utilized Excel files that other people at the Florida Department of Health had put on a network drive.
Or, put another way: Jones confirmed this week that she has been lying about the role she played in the department. And, once she’d done that, there was nothing that she could do except to back off her main claim. No direct access to the database means no ability to delete data from the database. No ability to delete data from...the database means no claim that she was asked to...
The 90 Miles Mystery Video: Nyctophilia Edition #661
The 90 Miles Mystery Box: Episode #1361
Friday, May 21, 2021
When Bison Attack!
More Wild Gifs!:
More Amazing Animated Gifs HERE
Animated Gif Collection #2 HERE
Animated Gif Collection #3
Animated Gif Collection #4
Animated Gif Collection #5 -OR- Motorcycles And Bulls Don't Mix..
Animated Gif Collection #6 or Bet She Lost Some Teeth...
Animated Gif Collection #7 -OR- This Is What Happens When You Fall Asleep While Driving...
Animated Gif Collection #8 -OR- Fish: 1, Dog: 0
Animated Gif Collection #9 -OR-Out Of Control Bus -OR-
Animated Gif Collection #10 -OR- How To Launch An Oil Truck Into The Air
Animated Gif Collection #11 -OR- Man That Must Have Hurt
Animated GIF Collection #12 -OR- This Is Brutal
Animated Gif Collection #13 -OR- This Guy Was Inches From DEATH!
Animated Gif Collection #14
Animated Gif Collection #15
Animated Gif Collection #16 -OR- Make It Rain!
Animated Gif Collection #17 -OR- THIS IS NOT HOW YOU KILL THE CHINESE CORONA VIRUS!
Joe Biden Fights Dementia -OR- Amazing Gif Collection #18
Bull Ride -OR- Amazing Gif Collection #19
Pickup Truck Gets Unexpected Passenger -OR- Amazing Gif Collection #20
Motorcycle Explodes In Collision With Truck -OR- Amazing Gif Collection #21
CONFIRMED: Black female was behind racist Instagram hoax account
EXCLUSIVE: School officials hid race from the public
The College Fix has obtained police reports from White Bear Lake in Minnesota that indicate that the creator of an Instagram account that sent racist messages to black girls, is a black female.
The school district had only referred to her as a “young person” and originally said that the incident appeared to be a “hoax” but walked back from that statement.
But the police reports, obtained by The College Fix through a public records act request, state that the student who created the account is a member of the Black Excellence Club.
Police could not confirm that she is also the one who sent the racist messages, which included telling a group of black girls to “Die Nigger,” among other things. However, using tech forensics, police determined that the messages were sent from the girl’s home IP address, according to police reports.
What’s more, the unidentified black girl told a White Bear Lake police officer that she could not tell her friends that she created the account but did not send the messages because “they’re not stupid.”
The girl will not face any criminal charges for the hate-crime hoax.
“The case as presented by law enforcement did not warrant criminal charges,” Dennis Gerhardstein, a spokesperson for the Ramsey County prosecutor’s office, said in...