QuickQuotes

Vladimir Putin (AP Images)

“I told you our favorite, if you can call it that, was President Biden. He’s now out of the race, but he asked his supporters to back Ms. Harris, so we’ll do the same…. Her laugh is so fascinating. It means that everything is good…. Maybe she’ll refrain herself from [sanctions against Russia], or maybe she’ll change them.” 
Russian President Vladimir Putin was interviewed at the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok in September by Ilya Doronov, a journalist and managing director of the RBC television channel, who seemed to stifle laughter at his remarks. An incensed John Kirby, the White House national security communications advisor, later told media that Putin “shouldn’t be favoring anybody one way or another.”

“Look what you are doing to this poor creature! Shame on you! You must all go back to your country! I see you have cigarettes here, and you have no money for food? Buy some bread instead of killing a pet!”
An unidentified woman was recorded in July 2020 by commuters at Campiglia Marittima station in the province of Livorno, Italy. She was yelling at a man for cooking a dead cat on the sidewalk. International Business Times reported that the 23-year-old illegal alien from the Ivory Coast was arrested but released after questioning.

Robert Bryce (Wikimedia Commons/Aarmlovi)

“First, it’s the staggering amount of land that this project aims to cover, thirty thousand acres, that’s forty-seven square miles. They’re going to have to use massive amounts of groundwater — by my calculations, roughly ten gallons of water … to produce one gallon of oil equivalent. The overall energy output will be about nine hundred and eighty barrels of oil equivalent per day, in Texas. To put that … into perspective, an average new oil well in the Permian Basin today is producing thirteen hundred barrels [per day] from a single well.”
Author and energy expert Robert Bryce took to social media in September to expose “the stupidity of green hydrogen.” In his recent Substack, “Invasion of the Water Snatchers,” Bryce details plans of the Ireland-based, foreign-backed company ET Fuels to build the referenced $800 million project in an arid region of west Texas.

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