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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

The Summer 2024 Presidential Succession Crisis Explodes
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The Summer 2024 Presidential Succession Crisis Explodes

As I wrote in my last TAS article: The importance of settling remaining issues pertaining to presidential succession can hardly be overstated. Of 45 prior presidents, nine failed to complete their term: four were assassinated; four died of natural causes; and one resigned. Of 48 prior vice-presidents, 18 did not complete their term: 9 died of natural causes, 2 resigned; 9 ascended to the presidency. In the 179 years prior to the 1967 ratification of the 25th Amendment, the republic was without a vice-president for 37-3/4 years — 21 percent of the time. A Debate Inflection Point After Thursday’s presidential debate, one thing is clear: Joe Biden will NOT be nominated at the Democratic Convention. He will be persuaded to announce that he will not run for re-election — a reversion to his 2020 campaign pledge, made to assuage voter concerns about his age, that he would serve as a one-term president. With Trump viewed as Evil Incarnate, the Democrats will wager that most voters will come home this fall. Longtime passionate Biden supporter Van Jones gave his evaluation (1:00): “It was painful.” He called for replacing Biden on the ticket. CNN’s chief national correspondent, John King stated  (1:27) that the Democrats, after a “game changing” debate, are in “a deep, a wide and a very aggressive panic” over Biden’s disastrous performance. He added that among the options party insiders are considering is to visit the president at the White House and ask him to step down, or to have “prominent” Democrats call publicly for his resignation. Early in the debate Biden had an episode of slurred speech, and then a brain freeze (4:20, at 0:28-0:42). Finally, there was the spectacle of First Lady Jill Biden escorting (4:37, 0:1 to 0:18) her clearly physically frail husband off the debate stage. (READ MORE from John Wohlstetter: The Summer 2024 Presidential Succession Crisis) Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan, a longtime critic of the former president, in her Friday column, called the debate “as consequential as any presidential debate in history, and the worst night for an incumbent in history … an unmitigated disaster for Mr. Biden … a rout for Mr. Trump.” She added that were the election held the next day, Trump would win in a landslide. Friday saw the New York Times editorial board — literally the Bible for many influential Democrats — call upon the president to step down: There is no reason for the party to risk the stability and security of the country by forcing voters to choose between Mr. Trump’s deficiencies and those of Mr. Biden…. It’s too big a bet to simply hope Americans will overlook or discount Mr. Biden’s age and infirmity that they see with their own eyes. There is yet a further complication: The text of section 4, the involuntary disability provision of the 25th Amendment, does not specifically contemplate permanent removal of the president — only that a president’s involuntary inability makes the vice-president an Acting President — exercising the “powers and duties” of the Office, without holding the Office of the Presidency. It provides, in pertinent part: If the Congress, within twenty-one days after receipt of the latter written declaration, or, if Congress is not in session, within twenty-one days after Congress is required to assemble, determines by two-thirds vote of both Houses that the President is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Vice President shall continue to discharge the same as Acting President; otherwise, the President shall resume the powers and duties of his office. Thus, in a worst-case scenario, the president can renew, seriatum, requests for restoration of presidential powers, leading to an endless cycle of presidential application and Congressional rejection. A further problem is now to deal with Kamala Harris, who is viewed even more unfavorably by voters. One way is to select California Governor Gavin Newsom, who has made himself publicly recognized as a presidential nominee; per clause 3 of Article II, section 1, which provides: The Electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by Ballot for Two Persons, of whom one at least shall not be an Inhabitant of the same State with themselves. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “inhabitant’ as residing permanently in, having established domicile in, or being a citizen of, a State. Both Newsom and Harris were born in, and are permanent residents of California. (Between 1966 and 1986, Harris resided elsewhere much of the time, but has resided continually in California since 1986.) Thus, California Electors who vote for Newsom as president cannot also vote for Kamala. To be sure, California’s Democrat Electors would choose another Democrat. But if the November presidential election result yields a margin of less than 52 electoral votes for the victor — widely considered a virtual certitude — were Newsom elected president, he would be saddled with a Republican vice-president. This could prove consequential in event of 50-50 tie votes on legislation or federal judicial nominations; a GOP vice-president could cast the tie-breaking vote against Newsom’s nominees. Bottom Line. Few believe that a manifestly weakened president can handle the immense daily workload of the presidency. Those making decisions behind the scene resemble the clandestine regency that arose for the last 17 months of Woodrow Wilson’s second presidential term, triggered by the president’s massive stroke. (READ MORE: Can America Survive Israel’s Nuclear Destruction?) But that clandestine regency succeeded in considerable measure due to the pre-modern state of national and global communications. There was no television, with its compelling visual images; only newsreels aired in theaters days later; let alone were there 24/7 videos online, trillions circulated by social media. Broadcast radio was in its infancy: The first commercial radio broadcast, from KDKA Pittsburgh, was aired November 2, 1920 — exactly 13 months after Wilson’s October 2, 1919 disabling stroke. It seems clear that, one way or another, Democrats will find a way to get Biden to drop out of the race and — though this is fraught with risk of losing support among several core Democratic constituencies — manage to replace Kamala Harris as well. With Trump viewed as Evil Incarnate, the Democrats will wager that most voters will come home this fall. It is a better wager than betting Biden’s inability to vigorously campaign won’t worsen. John C. Wohlstetter is author of Presidential Succession: Constitution, Congress and National Security(Gold Institute Press, 2024). The post The Summer 2024 Presidential Succession Crisis Explodes appeared first on The American Spectator | USA News and Politics.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Psychological Bioterrorism
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Psychological Bioterrorism

An address to the “No to Agenda 2030” conference in Rome, Italy
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Merck misled participants in Gardasil HPV vaccine trial
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Merck misled participants in Gardasil HPV vaccine trial

A new study published in the International Journal of Risk & Safety in Medicine, has found Merck seriously misled the participants in a trial of its Human Papilloma Virus (HPV) vaccine and compromised their right to informed consent.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Judge releases grand jury records in 2008 Jeffrey Epstein criminal case
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Judge releases grand jury records in 2008 Jeffrey Epstein criminal case

They were secret for 16 years. Now a judge has released the Epstein grand jury records A Palm Beach County judge has released the grand jury records in the 2008 Jeffrey Epstein criminal case.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Our Version of a Theocratic State
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Our Version of a Theocratic State

Brazil is the only country in the world mandating Covid-19 vaccines for children aged 6 months to 5 years. In the end, the arguments of those who support this are similar to those of Islamic State members.
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Escaping MK Ultra: A Survivor Fights Gov Trafficking with Dr. Juliette Engel
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Escaping MK Ultra: A Survivor Fights Gov Trafficking with Dr. Juliette Engel

from RedPill78:  TRUTH LIVES on at https://sgtreport.tv/
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
1 y

Why the U.S. is increasingly unfit for world leadership
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Why the U.S. is increasingly unfit for world leadership

by Eric Zuesse, The Duran: Andrey Sushentsov, the leading professor at the Russian Foreign Ministry’s MGMO University, and one of Russia’s top geostrategists, headlined on June 28th, “Why the Russia-US conflict will outlast the Ukraine crisis: Moscow must look at Washington as a long-term threat”, and he opened: The desire of the US to dominate and […]
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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

What Was Personal Hygiene Like in Ancient Rome?
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What Was Personal Hygiene Like in Ancient Rome?

Undoubtedly one of the things that the Romans were most famous for was their baths. Unlike nearly all earlier civilizations that the archaeological evidence suggests were not overly concerned with personal hygiene, the Romans gave over large spaces in every city and town they built to public spaces where people could go and clean themselves.  As such, the residents of the Eternal City were the first people to invest large amounts of state resources into public sanitation and equate cleanliness with civility. But were the public baths effective at keeping people clean, and what was hygiene like in ancient Rome?  Roman Public Toilets What were the Roman Baths Like? Let’s start with the baths themselves. Though we call them Roman baths today, these went by two slightly different names at the time, depending on where one was in the baths. The parts of the baths where one steamed oneself, the equivalent of what we would call a sauna today, were known as thermae from the Greek thermos for ‘hot’. The actual bathing chambers or baths were the balneae from the Greek balaneion, which means something close to ‘a place to bathe’.  There are numerous examples of Roman baths which are still largely extant today, the most famous being the Baths of Caracalla in Rome, built by an early third-century AD emperor, and the famous baths of the town of Bath in south-western England.  Almost every central town in the empire had at least one public bath, while many cities had multiple such cleaning facilities. The wealthy would have had private baths on their estates or villas. But despite their proliferation of them, the Roman baths did not necessarily create a clean society.  Remains of the Baths of Trajan, Rome. Photo by Rabax63. CC BY-SA 4.0 Water was only changed daily in many instances and without proper filtration systems such as those existing in modern public swimming pools. So whatever came off of one person stayed in the water for hours. As such, the waters of the baths became petri dishes of bacteria and disease as the day went on.  This fact was compounded by the fact that Roman physicians and doctors often prescribed ‘taking the hot waters’, i.e. spending large amounts of time in the thermae steam rooms as a curative for many ailments.  Consequently, sick people were often actively encouraged to go and spread whatever they were carrying in the local public baths. Moreover, one of the practices in the public baths was to use scraping devices to scrape a person’s skin clean after being in the thermae, a practice that spread bacteria and germs even further. All in all, while historians agree that the Romans’ obsession with cleanliness constituted a mark of social progress, there were many drawbacks to how they attempted this in the public baths. Roman Public Toilets This contradiction was mirrored in other areas. For instance, the Romans were one of the first civilizations to systematically build latrines or public toilets in their towns and cities. They even constructed them in military forts and other smaller settlements.  Often these consisted of large trenches over which something reasonably similar to modern public toilets were built, with seats of wood or stone that people sat on. A water supply was piped in to keep the waste below running through the trench to a less offensive place.  While this was not as effective as a modern sewage system, it had the same fundamental basics to how it operated. However, most homes were not connected to this system. The waste that most people collected in pots was often thrown out on side streets and alleyways, as it was throughout Europe in more modern times until as recently as the nineteenth century in many large urban centers. Unfortunately, one very unpleasant aspect of the public toilets was that the Romans used a device called a tersorium to clean themselves. This resembled a modern toilet brush and was effectively a sea sponge connected to the end of a stick. Visitors used it repeatedly to clean themselves and wash in a bucket with water, salt, or vinegar between users. As well as being disgusting, this was highly unsanitary from a health perspective. Disease from Hygiene Other elements of Roman life were severely unhygienic, not by accident or ignorance of how sanitation worked, but simply through neglect. For example, although Rome made efforts to organize public rubbish collection services, the streets of Rome and other cities, particularly in the poorer districts, were often covered in rubbish.  This was largely food and household waste. So thick was it that stepping stones sometimes had to be put down to traverse especially affected areas. Unsurprisingly, rodents and other vermin were rife, as they often are in cities with current waste disposal problems.  More pedestrian ways disease might spread were through poor food hygiene or simply by even water puddles on damaged streets during winter. These could become spreaders of diseases like malaria.  Because of this, much like most societies until the late nineteenth century, Rome was prone to major disease outbreaks, notably the Antonine Plague of 165 AD to 180 AD. This was probably a pandemic of smallpox or measles exacerbated by the cramped, unsanitary conditions of the empire’s cities. It killed between five and ten million Roman subjects, approximately 10-15% of the empire’s population at the time. How Aqueducts affected Hygiene One of the significant advantages that the Romans did have was a near-constant supply of fresh water for cleaning and drinking. In addition, their aqueducts, the large arches bearing pipes and conduits for water from rivers and other sources into towns and cities, were fantastic inventions that delivered water into the empire’s cities.  Roman Aqueducts. Wikimedia Commons Without aqueducts, hygiene across the Roman Empire would have been far worse than it was. Romans could clean themselves better, acquire fresh drinking water and at least keep sewage, bacteria, and germs manageable in cities like Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch, which had hundreds of thousands of inhabitants.  Indeed, it was not until the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries that complex waterworks began being developed for cities like London, Paris, and Amsterdam that the Roman aqueducts were surpassed in their ability to deliver fresh, clean, safe water into European countries’ cities. So, while the Romans might have gotten many things wrong regarding their hygiene, they got an awful lot right too. Sources                                    Fikret Yegül, Baths and Bathing in Classical Antiquity (New York, 1992).  M. Bradley, Rome, Pollution and Propriety: Dirt, Disease and Hygiene in the Eternal City from Antiquity to Modernity (Cambridge, 2012).  Harold Farnsworth Gray, ‘Sewerage in Ancient and Mediaeval Times’, in Sewage Works Journal, Vol.12, No. 5 (1940), pp. 939–946;  James McDonald, ‘The Health Risks of Living in Ancient Rome’, JSTOR Daily, 26 February 2016; J. F. Gilliam, ‘The Plague Under Marcus Aurelius’, in American Journal of Philology, Vol. 82, No. 3 (July 1961), pp. 225–251. C. Bruun, The Water Supply of Ancient Rome: A Study of Roman Imperial Administration (Helsinki, 1991). The post What Was Personal Hygiene Like in Ancient Rome? first appeared on History Defined.
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The People's Voice Feed
The People's Voice Feed
1 y

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla Thought the Covid Vaccine Was So Safe & Effective That He Didn’t Take It
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Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla Thought the Covid Vaccine Was So Safe & Effective That He Didn’t Take It

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla was so convinced by the safety and effectiveness of his company’s experimental and rapidly produced Covid-19 vaccines that he urged every citizen of the world to get double vaccinated as soon [...] The post Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla Thought the Covid Vaccine Was So Safe & Effective That He Didn’t Take It appeared first on The People's Voice.
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The First - News Feed
The First - News Feed
1 y ·Youtube News & Oppinion

YouTube
O’Reilly Reveals the Potential Replacements For Joe Biden
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