Trump being debriefed on America's deepest secrets today

Self_Born7

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all 23 million miles of useful land
Ya dropping sum great conspiracy info I never heard before.

Keep it coming!!!

:feedme:
the sun is actually black,,, what you see every day is just a hologram.
the sun is closest to the earth during the winter months, but yet its cold as hell
the sun is fartherest from the earth during the summer months, but yet its hot as hell

NASA is just a front, they really don't do or know shyt... Their is a Covert Space program we know nothing about.

Donald Trump is a known member of the Knights Templar, and high ranking freemason

Arturo Marcelino Sosa Abasca of Venezuela was just elected Superior General of the Society of Jesus- AKA the Black Pope, is the worlds most powerful man. This is who your 13 bloodline of the Illuminanti answer to, your Rothchilds, Rockefellers, Astors, Bundys, etc. he sits atop of the illuminati pyramid and answers to NO ONE.

Grand Central Terminal in NY covertly is a masonic lodge

Highly Ranked Freemasons, like Bush, Prince Phillip, and them meet and conduct rituals in Pyramids in Egypt every new years eve.
The pyramids are energy transmitters, yes egytpians had electricity back then, why else did they discover light bulbs in tombs
the sphinx of Giza is a woman... and have been around for over a hundred thousand years

There were 3 Snipers used in the Kennedy Assassination, One in the Texas Book Depository, the Dal-Tex Building, Triple over pass... first couple of shots missed, 3rd shot struck his neck from teh dal tex building... open hearing this, the SS service agent in the follow up car accidentally discharged his weapon, causing the fatal head wound to Kennedy.

Jessie was the actual person, who called days earlier to switch MLK room from a first floor, to the top floor, and reported to Hoover, mlk jr. moves through out that day... Jessie told that MLK jr, would be wearing a tie, and his refusal to wear a tie, fearing he would be mistaken by the assassin, was a big argument, before they left that night to dinner plans in which they never made.

The Civil Rights movement was funded by Rothchild/Zionist.

as of December 21, 2012 the end of the mayan calender, this planet has been shifting from third dimension(3D) to the 5th dimension,

Niburu is not a planet/dwarf star, but is a mother ship

The Matrix is REAL... Go back and look at again and again. That movie breaks down this whole system.


 
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Soundbwoy

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For the brehs talking about Antarctica and what might be down there, there's this blood red waterfall that's about five stories high just oozing out of a glacier. That thing on the bottom left is a tent to give the thing a sense of scale


1024px-Blood_Falls_by_Peter_Rejcek.jpg
you got more info on Antarctica:ohhh:
 

Waldo Geraldo Faldo

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you got more info on Antarctica:ohhh:

Weird and Wild Antarctica

Here are some intriguing tidbits about the southernmost continent and its exotic, extreme environment and unusual history.

1. Even though 98 percent of Antarctica’s 5.4 million square mile area is covered with ice, it has so little precipitation—just two inches annually—that it qualifies as the world’s single biggest desert.

2. Despite its extreme environment, Antarctica is an increasingly popular tourist destination, with about 37,000 people visiting each year, mostly on commercial cruises. In a traditional dare, some of them even take off most of their clothing and jump into the chilly Southern Ocean, where the temperature ranges from 28 to 50 degrees Fahrenheit.

3. Antarctica is the only continent with no trees. In fact, there’s very little plant life at all, except for algae, lichens, mosses, and two species of flowering plants—Antarctic hair grass (Deschampsia antarctica) and Antarctic pearlwort (Colobanthus quitensis).

4. Even though it’s a desert, Antarctica also has one of the world’s biggest lakes, located near Vostok. The lake is 160 miles long and 31 miles wide. It’s covered under a 2.5-mile-thick layer of ice.



2110400_the-ross-ice-shelf_3ov375vikibo7s2gojylb22oaaeatuw6lrlcsphco3flmkbrawuq_304x228.jpg

Photograph by National Geographic Channels/Jeremiah Kelley

The Ross Ice Shelf



5. At its thickest point, Antarctica’s ice cover is nearly three miles (15,669 feet) thick.

6. Though the interior of Antarctica is the coldest place on Earth, with an annual mean temperature of minus 71 degrees Fahrenheit, the continent’s coastline sometimes has pleasant weather, with temperatures rising as high as 59 degrees Fahrenheit.

7. For most of human history, Antarctica was uninhabited. The first documented landing in Antarctica was on Feb, 6, 1821, by an American named John Davis, who was part of an expedition looking for seals to hunt.

8. The first and so far the only documented native of Antarctica is Emilio Marcos Palma, who was born at an Argentine research station in 1978.

9. The Russian research outpost of Vostok holds the record for the lowest temperature ever recorded on the planet-- minus 128.56 degrees on July 21, 1983.

10. When Antarctic researchers working get bored with watching movies on DVD, working out in the base gym or drinking at the bar, they’ve been known to perform daredevil stunts to amuse themselves. At Amundsen base, for example, people sometimes jump out of the sauna and streak outside in the cold, wearing nothing but shoes.

11. Though a 1959 treaty turned Antarctica into an international zone that’s devoted to science, seven countries still have historical claims on Antarctic territory--Chile, England, Argentina, France, Australia, New Zealand, and Norway.

12. Today, if you die on a base in the Antarctic, your body will be shipped home to your native country. But when early explorer Robert Scott and two of his men died in 1912, the surviving members of their expedition simply left them buried under the ice and snow, where their bodies remain today.

13. While Antarctica is home to sea birds, seals, and other aquatic creatures, the only completely land-based animals on the continent are insects and microscopic organisms.

14. Researchers living in the Antarctic go to the bathroom the same way that you do. But some bases lack sewage treatment, which means that the waste ends up being pumped directly into the Southern Ocean.

15. The tent set up by explorer Roald Amundsen and his team when they arrived at the South Pole in December 1911 is still there. It’s now buried under ice and snow.

16. There’s internet access in Antarctica but you can’t really surf the web, since the limited bandwidth is reserved mostly for scientific use. One researcher told Cosmopolitan magazine that she was allocated just enough online time to check her email and Facebook once a day.

17. The biggest traditional holiday in Antarctica is the mid-Winter solstice, which falls in late June. Researchers at bases hold holiday dinners and jokingly send email invites to colleagues at other bases, knowing that the distance and cold would prevent them from accepting.

18. Under the conditions of an international treaty signed in 1959, Antarctica is the only continent on the planet where military maneuvers, the building of fortifications and weapons testing are banned. Military units can visit Antarctica, but only for peaceful purposes such as scientific research.

19. Antarctica has a mountain range, the Gamburtsev Mountains, which stretch for 750 miles and stand 9,000 feet tall. But you can’t see them from the surface, because they’re underground, buried under ice.
 

EndDomination

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First I've ever heard of this.... Wouldn't be on my bucket list anyway but what is the reason no one can travel here.
You can, had a friend that did geo research there last year.
Was away from his wife for like 8 or 9 months.
 
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