24160394? ago

I thought the Freys were all dead. Arya must have missed one.

24159604? ago

Someone had delivered bricks to throw? https://voat.co/v/Conspiracy/3858416

24159678? ago

Planned riots, they did something similar almost 200 yrs ago ... Haiti is a good example.

24250704? ago

That was just typical nigger behavior. See also South Africa.

24161450? ago

The House of Sweden connection https://i.4pcdn.org/pol/1591366547750.jpg

24159699? ago

Give the Gold Coffin...People who watch ... and think it's real news

24196870? ago

? https://streamable.com/o2xkf9 The Independent Order of the Odd Fellows dates to 17th-century England as a charitable organization that worked to help families in need and buried their dead. The first American lodge opened in Baltimore in 1819.

Present-day Odd Fellows support a professorship of ophthalmology at Johns Hopkins University and contribute to the Arthritis Foundation and American Heart Assn. The organization’s symbol--three interlocking rings--represents friendship, love and truth.

The skeletons likely were purchased from scientific or fraternal supply companies. One catalog from the early 1900s advertised a “genuine, full-size selected specimen, set up and wired, fairly deodorized.”

“Every one has a different story,” said Randall Kremer, a spokesman at the Smithsonian Institution. “The companies would obtain skeletons from anywhere possible. They could be indigents. Or often people, especially at the higher levels of society, were anxious to donate their remains for scientific study.”

So far, authorities have learned that the Warrenton remains are those of a Caucasian woman who stood about 5 feet 1. Her arms, feet and lower jaw are missing. She could have died from 10 to 150 years ago. Medical examiners studying the bones are consulting with anthropologists at the Smithsonian, police said. https://voat.co/v/QRV/3861984/24184946 just a drinking club

24159719? ago

A degree to which they're pushing race in this

24159615? ago

24159370? ago

The order is also known as the Triple Link Fraternity, referring to the order's "Triple Links" symbol, alluding to its motto "Friendship, Love and Truth".

Odd Fellows from that time include John Wilkes (1725–1797) and Sir George Savile, 8th Baronet of Thornton (1726–1784), advocating civil liberties and reliefs, including Catholic emancipation. Political repressions such as the Unlawful Oaths Act (1797) and the Unlawful Societies Act (1799),[4] resulted in neutral amalgamation of the Grand United Order of Oddfellows in 1798. Since then the fraternity has remained religiously and politically independent. George IV of the United Kingdom, admitted in 1780, was the first documented of many Odd Fellows to also attend freemasonry