Why does the illuminati kill famous people
And am I okay? As far as the first two are concerned, a man named Donald Marshall has the answers. When Marshall was born, his family was already living in the cloning center.
Yet in all his writings and interviews, he never specifies exactly why his family lived in this clandestine Illuminati palace in the first place. Details, details.
This secret society super-group is what we know today as the ever-elusive Illuminati. Members of the Illuminati which naturally include all the G20 world leaders typically meet in subterranean bunkers.
The very same bunkers that, according to Marshall, house what has become a highly lucrative network of celebrity cloning farms. Some of these clones are used for mere entertainment value gladiator-style wrestling bouts, sexual perversions, Illuminati ritual sacrifices, what have you. Organ harvesting is the least of your worries as a clone, though. In his original tell-all Facebook post from , Marshall explained:.
The royal family of England, Each new clone decreases your mental capacity, as well, so the more clones made, the easier that person is to hurt or subdue. And as all the pros know, if you really want to keep someone under your thumb, all you have to do is kill the original copy. Clones are notoriously obedient, which apparently comes in handy when you need them to churn out hit single after hit single.
Britney Spears is dead. That is, assuming the now-defunct but accessible here website BritneyIsDead. Justin is still in a coma; his clone roams free. Because pop stars must have heads, the label was forced to find a Britney Spears stand-in.
He went down the QAnon rabbit hole for almost two years. Here's how he got out. Mexican law enforcement was notified about the missing children and, according to the affidavit, police in Rosarito confirmed that two children matching the description of Coleman's were found dead that morning.
During his interview with the FBI, Coleman said he had killed his children in Rosarito, the affidavit said. He told authorities "he believed his children were going to grow into monsters so he had to kill them," the affidavit said, speaking about QAnon conspiracy theories and the belief that his wife passed along "serpent DNA. Coleman said of the killings that "he knew it was wrong, but it was the only course of action that would save the world," according to the affidavit. QAnon is a sprawling far-right conspiracy theory that promotes the absurd and false claim that former President Donald Trump has been locked in a battle against a shadowy cabal of Satan-worshipping pedophiles made up of prominent Democratic politicians and liberal celebrities.
The FBI has previously warned of the potential danger posed by followers of the conspiracy theory movement. The news even briefly rattled Wall Street investors. Bloomberg's correction however didn't even list Jobs by name. One report said he died of cardiac arrest due to complications with his diabetes , while another said his heart stopped after a lap dance in a Dallas strip club. She was said to have been in a fatal car accident and then, months later, died from an allergic reaction to sleeping pills , which spread like wildfire on Facebook and YouTube.
In July , she was once again said to be dead, presumably because of a mural by an Australian artist that got lots of press. The perpetrator of the "joke" later posted an apology , saying in part, "… Thanks for apparently taking it lightly, since I haven't gotten a letter about a lawsuit yet. Just so you know, I'm a huge fan; that's the only reason I made this page, believe it or not.
Also, sorry for upsetting your mother. Don't know how I got there, but the media are never wrong. News as their source — which was false. But the news spread, thanks to a fake Kim Kardashian Twitter account. There were suicide rumors in which resurfaced in , along with a shooting in a nightclub and an overdose. On Aug. A spokesman for Soros said that the New York-based financier is alive and well.
Reuters regrets the error. The post linked to what they said was a "news report," which, when clicked, requested permission to access the viewer's accounts.
He nixed the report and posted a Facebook message of his own that read, "Rumors of my death are false - Im still 'Bringin' It' 24hrs a day, 7 days a week, days a year - including leap year! They took it a step further by producing a video with spliced footage of a breaking news segment and a tearful anchor.
0コメント