superrific
Master of the ZZLverse
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Is that letter actually a fake? CNN seems to have debunked the claims of fakeness from DOJ.
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Right now, I don't think anyone knows for sure.Is that letter actually a fake? CNN seems to have debunked the claims of fakeness from DOJ.
So you're a handwriting analyst now? In addition to all your other expertises?
USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA!If you had told me just a decade ago that within ten years we would be living in a nation where the Department of Justice would have people working on social media on Christmas Eve trolling critics of the sitting president and trying desperately to cover their own incompetent asses and JCD'ing a cult leader president I simply wouldn't have believed it. And yet here we are. We really are living in the weirdest timeline.
Just about?He makes just about everything worse.
He'll certainly improve the obituaries, one day.Just about?
I was looking at that. That's a possibility. I was looking at the lean. It looked like all the letters in the Nassar letter had a significant tilt to the right where the jail letter was straight up to slightly to the left. Also, if you look at the t's in the nassar letter, the cross hashes mostly loop up like a smile while the jail letter is straight across. I'm no expert, and I may be wrong but overall it looks different to me.There are print s at the beginning of words in each and those certainly look very similar.
Peace on earth
“… Nigeria has a population of some 237 million people, roughly split between Muslims who are predominantly in the north, and Christians who are mostly in the south. Violence against Christians has escalated in northern Nigeria during the past decade, as Islamist extremists such as Boko Haram wage an insurgency against the country’s secular government and expand their influence in the region.“… On Friday, Nigerian authorities were adamant that the U.S. strikes—which the Nigerian government aided— weren’t aimed at protecting any particular religious group.
The Nigerian government doesn’t agree that Christians are being targeted, previously labeling the claims a “gross misrepresentation of the reality.”
“Terrorist violence in any form whether directed at Christians, Muslims, or other communities remains an affront to Nigeria’s values and to international peace and security,” a spokesman for Nigeria’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
… The U.S. said the strikes hit Nigeria’s northwestern state of Sokoto, where criminal gangs known locally as “bandits” abduct children, churchgoers and others in exchange for ransom payments. The Nigerian government designated the bandits as terrorists under domestic law in January 2022, allowing increased use of the military against them.
Neither the U.S. nor Nigeria has disclosed details about the targets or how many people were killed. U.S. Africa Command, which conducted the strike, said that it used intelligence from U.S. and Nigerian forces, and that its initial assessment is that “multiple ISIS terrorists were killed.”…”