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Post by emerald on Feb 22, 2024 14:57:10 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Feb 22, 2024 15:13:16 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Feb 28, 2024 18:16:11 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 6, 2024 15:59:22 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 9, 2024 14:20:21 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 13, 2024 18:46:26 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 14, 2024 3:47:06 GMT -5
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Post by beatlies on Mar 20, 2024 20:39:02 GMT -5
Interesting info about the late Mr. Thompson at 7:13 Former Disney Channel Star Lee Thompson Young Found DeadLee Thompson Young, a former Disney Channel star who appeared on "Rizzoli & Isles," was found dead this morning at the age of 29. Police confirmed that the versatile young actor died in an apparent suicide of a gunshot wound. TMZ reports that Young’s landlord found him when he did not report to the set of the TNT drama this morning. When officers arrived to his apartment at the 5000 block of Tujunga Avenue, they pronounced him dead at the scene. There is no word on whether Young left a note, and the coroner is taking over the case. After the end of the series, Young appeared in Jamie Foxx's "Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story" and in the "Friday Night Lights" movie as Chris Comer. He also landed guest roles in TV shows including "The Guardian," "South Beach," and "Smallville." In 2009, Young starred in the short-lived sci-fi drama "FlashForward" as an FBI agent who commits suicide to prevent a death. His latest work was in TNT's "Rizzoli & Isles" as Det. Barry Frost, Rizzoli's (Angie Harmon) partner. The show halted production today as the cast and crew grieved over Young’s death and it’s unclear when filming will resume. Young graduated with honors from the University of Southern California. Velma Love, official parent of Lee Thompson Young (who was a clone of singer Sam Cooke, who was killed on December 11, 1964?)--- "Velma E. Love, author of Divining the Self: a Study in Yoruba Myth and Human Consciousness (Penn State University Press, 2012), is currently the Project Director for “Equipping the Saints: Promising Practices in Black Congregational Life,” a Lilly Endowment funded project at Howard University School of Divinity in Washington, DC. Formerly an Associate Professor of Religion at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee, FL, she received the BA from the University of South Carolina, the M. Div. from Union Theological Seminary and the Ph.D. from Claremont Graduate University. Love’s primary research interests include sacred texts in society, the contemporary application of Ifa spiritual technology, Africana spiritual narratives, spirituality and holistic health, and the spiritual memoirs of women of African descent. Love says it is a fascination with story, the stories we tell and the stories we live by, that defines and shapes her work. Her publications include: Scriptures as Sundials in African American Lives,” in Wimbush, ed. Reading Scriptures, Reading America: Interruptions, Orientation, and Mimicry among US Communities of Color (Oxford University Press, 2013). Divining the Self: A Study in Yoruba Myth and Human Consciousness (Penn State University Press, 2012). “Netnography and the Study of Religion,” Teaching Theology & Religion Volume 14, Number 3, July 2011. “Casting the Sacred Reading the Self: The Material Culture and Storied Environment of Ifa Divination and the Holy Odu,” Postscripts: The Journal of Sacred Texts and Contemporary Worlds Vol. 4 No. 2 (2008). “Making and Re-Making Worlds: African Americans and the Bible,” Union Seminary Quarterly Review, Volume 56, 2002, Number 1-2. “The Bible and Contemporary African American Culture: Hermeneutical Forays, Observations, and Impressions” in African Americans and the Bible: Sacred Texts and Social Textures, ed.,Vincent L. Wimbush (New York: Continuum, 2000). Her research has been supported by the Fund for Theological Education, the United Methodist Women of Color Scholars Program, The Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion, Dumbarton Oaks Library, the Womanist Scholars Program of the Interdenominational Theological Center, and the Baylor University Oral History Center. Love is also a cultural worker with extensive experience in non-profit management, youth development, and community arts, having served as the Executive Director of a Big Brothers Big Sisters Agency, a United Way Youth Leadership Program Director, and a Community Arts Program Chair. Dr. Love’s community service awards include: United Way of America’s 21st Century Youth Initiative Award, University of SC Black Faculty’s Community Service Award, and the I have A Dream Award.
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Post by emerald on Mar 21, 2024 16:30:13 GMT -5
Interesting info about the late Mr. Thompson at 7:13 Former Disney Channel Star Lee Thompson Young Found DeadLee Thompson Young, a former Disney Channel star who appeared on "Rizzoli & Isles," was found dead this morning at the age of 29. Police confirmed that the versatile young actor died in an apparent suicide of a gunshot wound. TMZ reports that Young’s landlord found him when he did not report to the set of the TNT drama this morning. When officers arrived to his apartment at the 5000 block of Tujunga Avenue, they pronounced him dead at the scene. There is no word on whether Young left a note, and the coroner is taking over the case. After the end of the series, Young appeared in Jamie Foxx's "Redemption: The Stan Tookie Williams Story" and in the "Friday Night Lights" movie as Chris Comer. He also landed guest roles in TV shows including "The Guardian," "South Beach," and "Smallville." In 2009, Young starred in the short-lived sci-fi drama "FlashForward" as an FBI agent who commits suicide to prevent a death. His latest work was in TNT's "Rizzoli & Isles" as Det. Barry Frost, Rizzoli's (Angie Harmon) partner. The show halted production today as the cast and crew grieved over Young’s death and it’s unclear when filming will resume. Young graduated with honors from the University of Southern California. Velma Love, official parent of Lee Thompson Young (who was a clone of singer Sam Cooke, who was killed on December 11, 1964?)--- "Velma E. Love, author of Divining the Self: a Study in Yoruba Myth and Human Consciousness (Penn State University Press, 2012), is currently the Project Director for “Equipping the Saints: Promising Practices in Black Congregational Life,” a Lilly Endowment funded project at Howard University School of Divinity in Washington, DC. Formerly an Associate Professor of Religion at Florida A&M University in Tallahassee, FL, she received the BA from the University of South Carolina, the M. Div. from Union Theological Seminary and the Ph.D. from Claremont Graduate University. Love’s primary research interests include sacred texts in society, the contemporary application of Ifa spiritual technology, Africana spiritual narratives, spirituality and holistic health, and the spiritual memoirs of women of African descent. Love says it is a fascination with story, the stories we tell and the stories we live by, that defines and shapes her work. Her publications include: Scriptures as Sundials in African American Lives,” in Wimbush, ed. Reading Scriptures, Reading America: Interruptions, Orientation, and Mimicry among US Communities of Color (Oxford University Press, 2013). Divining the Self: A Study in Yoruba Myth and Human Consciousness (Penn State University Press, 2012). “Netnography and the Study of Religion,” Teaching Theology & Religion Volume 14, Number 3, July 2011. “Casting the Sacred Reading the Self: The Material Culture and Storied Environment of Ifa Divination and the Holy Odu,” Postscripts: The Journal of Sacred Texts and Contemporary Worlds Vol. 4 No. 2 (2008). “Making and Re-Making Worlds: African Americans and the Bible,” Union Seminary Quarterly Review, Volume 56, 2002, Number 1-2. “The Bible and Contemporary African American Culture: Hermeneutical Forays, Observations, and Impressions” in African Americans and the Bible: Sacred Texts and Social Textures, ed.,Vincent L. Wimbush (New York: Continuum, 2000). Her research has been supported by the Fund for Theological Education, the United Methodist Women of Color Scholars Program, The Wabash Center for Teaching and Learning in Theology and Religion, Dumbarton Oaks Library, the Womanist Scholars Program of the Interdenominational Theological Center, and the Baylor University Oral History Center. Love is also a cultural worker with extensive experience in non-profit management, youth development, and community arts, having served as the Executive Director of a Big Brothers Big Sisters Agency, a United Way Youth Leadership Program Director, and a Community Arts Program Chair. Dr. Love’s community service awards include: United Way of America’s 21st Century Youth Initiative Award, University of SC Black Faculty’s Community Service Award, and the I have A Dream Award. Where's the vid?
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Post by beatlies on Mar 22, 2024 7:27:51 GMT -5
"where's the vid?"
The video is embedded and did not show on the quote-reply display. Basically, the information in the video is the claim that TV series actor Lee Thompson Young was a literal, biological clone of the famed singer-songwriter Sam Cooke, who was murdered under questionable, mysterious circumstances on December 11, 1964.
Lee Thompson Young, who is said to have committed suicide by gunshot, did resemble Sam Cooke to a startling degree, except for the nose, which is somewhat smaller,though that could have been altered with plastic surgery to lessen the exact similarity between Sam Cooke and LTY.
If Sam Cooke really did die in December of 1964, then that would imply, according to that theory, that his cellular tissue was preserved and deep state scientists were somehow able to successfully take that decades-old DNA, grow an embryo from it, and implant that IVF clone embryo, at a very early stage of growth, into the womb of a woman who then would give birth to a healthy child, Lee Thompson Young, in (they say) February of 1984.
Scientists have only recently discovered how to create a healthy, adult cloned monkey, according to the publicly known science, with many failures preceding that, and such research as that on human cloning is banned by law due to ethical concerns. The quandry here is that it seems very unlikely that scientists had (secretly) developed the technology and experience to successfully create a healthy human clone by the year 1984. Unless they had hit upon a feasible embryonic technique that worked without advanced tech, decades before, and that would mean a huge, extremely unethical, covert program involving thousands of women and thousands of "failure" stillborn and extremely sick and disabled infants and children. So what was/is actually going on...?
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Post by emerald on Mar 25, 2024 15:52:39 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 28, 2024 15:42:16 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Mar 30, 2024 15:49:01 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Apr 3, 2024 14:25:28 GMT -5
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Post by emerald on Apr 6, 2024 4:40:15 GMT -5
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