Friday, March 24, 2023

Exposed: American Defeat In WW3 Now Certain...

Prepper.

Bolt your doors... lock your windows... and Watch This Mind-Blowing Video TODAY... mind blowing video



Because it reveals The #1 Reason CIA Director James Woolsey claims
over 228 million
Americans could be dead by election day...

And it won't be China, Russia, or ISIS pulling the trigger.

In fact, it's much closer to home....

It's already been banned in several key liberal states...

But word's spread fast...

Over 18,453,961 Americans have already seen it...

Click HERE Now to See the Full Shocking Documentary
(It only takes 3 minutes)

But Act Now - Before it's too late.








After the Irish war of Independence 1919–21 and the treaty that followed, Ireland was partitioned; Dublin became the capital of the Irish Free State, a Dominion within the British Commonwealth of Nations.[74] From December 1922, when the Free State was inaugurated, the Pillar became an issue for the Irish rather than the British government. In 1923, when Sackville Street was again in ruins during the Irish Civil War,[75] The Irish Builder and Engineer magazine called the original siting of the Pillar a "blunder" and asked for its removal,[76] a view echoed by the Dublin Citizens Association.[77] The poet William Butler Yeats, who had become a member of the Irish Senate, favoured its re-erection elsewhere, but thought it should not, as some wished, be destroyed, because "the life and work of the people who built it are part of our tradition."[12] Sackville Street was renamed O'Connell Street in 1924.[78][n 11] The following year the Dublin Metropolitan Police and the Dublin Civic Survey demanded legislation to allow the Pillar's removal, without success.[77] Pressure continued, and in 1926 The Manchester Guardian reported that the Pillar was to be taken down, "as it was a hindrance to modern traffic".[79] Requests for action—removal, destruction or the replacement of the statue with that of an Irish hero—continued up to the Second World War and beyond; the main stumbling blocks remained the trustees' strict interpretation of the terms of the trust, and the unwillingness of successive Irish governments to take legislative action.[77][80] In 1936 the magazine of the ultra-nationalist Blueshirts movement remarked that this inactivity showed a failure in the national spirit: "The conqueror is gone, but the scars which he left remain, and the victim will not even try to remove them".[81] "Man and boy I have lived in Dublin, on and off, for 68 years. When I was a young fellow we didn't talk about Nelson's Column or Nelson's Pillar, we spoke of the Pillar, and everyone knew what we meant". Thomas Bodkin, 1955[82] By 1949 the Irish Free State had evolved into the Republic of Ireland and left the British Commonwealth,[83] but not all Irish opinion favoured the removal of the Pillar. That year the architectural historian John Harvey called it "a grand wor








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