Trump just admitted that aliens exist and he has been communicating with them. Live on air.
>His exact words: Think of it; 151 countries. Somebody said to me today, who is not from this particular world, that they didn't know that we had that many countries."
The way he said it make it sound like an accident. As if he wasn’t thinking when he said it. This is huge, he just accidentally admitted that he is in contact with extraterrestrials.
I should probably care, but Trump has been known for being incoherent and trolling with nonsensical ramblings from time to time. If this was something that was said by a more serious leader like Merkel, Clinton or Xi then I'd be freaking out right now.
Carson Perez
Because non-retards realize "not from this world" is a common figure of speech referring to people with other interests or vocation.
Retard test Which is more likely: >1: He was casually talking about English speaking extraterrestrials at a press conference about coronavirus >2. He was talking about a person outside of the political world
Brandon Wilson
1
Eli Jenkins
Not in this particular world. As in not in the poltical world. Retard.
Luke Turner
Clearly he is talking about a person who is not part of the political world he is in. Oh well Ayy Lmao confirmed!
Noah Adams
"THEY didnt even know WE had that many countries" "Ive spoken to someone who not from this WORLD" come on thats not nothing
Camden Cooper
He has to dumb himself down for his base
Logan Gutierrez
Pro-tip: Lube your anus in advance, so the probe doesnt hurt as much
Cooper Bailey
Nothing burger. Stop asking question hu- I mean goy, it's the Jews that are in control don't you know.
Jacob Morales
He said that wasn't IN not who is not from. Sounds like he just jumbled up his words.
This would be most likely true
Jaxon Thompson
1 definitely. Aliens would speak English for sure, and humans from other dimensions or timelines would undoubtedly be fluent in it. No significant person with the president's ear would be unaware of how many countries there are. Trump also speaks cryptically on a daily basis, a behavior of which he knows the optics, and wouldn't choose without actually wanting people to dissect it.
Friendly reminder. Biggest cover-up/smear campaign since the beginning of humanity. Don't trust beaked space jews. And don't let smoothbrains conflate one with the other; that's always been the trick.
Btw you're misquoting. >OP: wasn't FROM >Trump: wasn't IN
Isaac Edwards
when's the supposed 3 day shutdown of the internet going to happen?
Austin Nguyen
>tesla RUMORED to not finish work >work was time/space travel unlim energy >at same time guy named John G Trump lived nearby >Trumps uncle, in new york, right by Tesla FAST FORWARD >Trump elected, partially exposes media liars >LITERALLY EVERYONE HATES HIM >Makes space force >Q user starts posting super cryptic messages >one thing he says is FUTURE PROVES PAST >Shills on net go into turbo damage control >every divide and conquer tactic employed all time >Covid19 hits >Qanon bros know whats up >WHOLE MEDIA IN MASS HYSTERIA
We would never understand the intentions of life forms that managed to get past the great filter and reach us.
David Watson
tfw it turns out not to be a benign considerate ayy lmao of the galactic federation of light but an actual demon who just isn't great at geography but never really cared about that because raining fire isn't troubled by borders
fellow zeta-retic- I mean, human, such obvious facts are obvious in these factual circumstances.
Bentley Perry
I'm on board with this, but only if I get to be an Earth/Human Emissary.
Asher Walker
has anyone, or is it just a myth?
Eli Perry
They nuked Mars 200 million years ago. Makes me think they are fairly chill with those decisions. >mars had full fledged kali yuga event and their insane souls spawned here with us, as kikes, npcs and all the obstacles we've had
Hunter Perez
You just want to do sex with hot alien qt's
Cameron Young
Trump is known to skip words. He obviously meant This particular PART of the world
Julian Clark
>"not from this world" is a common figure of speech It isn't. Why are you talking straight out of your ass like people won't know any better? "Out of this world" is a common phrase, "not of this world" is not and given the rest of the sentence it's fucking perturbing. This planet has the same number of countries regardless of what "political world" you hail from you stupid paki.
Digits and the Don is making an official full disclosure statement today
Jack Cooper
Oh my, I wasn't remonstrating with you, I was respecting your dedication to wholesomeness. :D
Logan Martin
if we're talking potential hostile aliens, then having people in their homes armed, with supplies is the best case scenario but of course, aliens with interplanetary travel could just wreck shit
Jace Davis
We've all been in contact with ayys. Literally. 5D space is weird.
i'm just amped to get to go to other worlds/dimensions and see alien art and do alien drugs and surf on the warm purple oceans of planet Fleeblefrox as I sip a warm blorponut and have my genitals caressed by a Fleebette's velvet tentacles
Dominic Jenkins
Quote him right. He said >that wasn't in this particular world not >who is not from this particular world implying someone who doesn't really have a clue about geopolitics, not a casual conversation with an alien. I wish though
Carter Brown
>Coronavirus is spacenigger smallpox
Jose Gutierrez
>who It's not who. It's wut
William Flores
That's what he meant, retard. Nikola Tesla fanboys are some of the most insufferable plebbitor-tier jerkoffs to be shat out of the popscience trend >OH MY GOD TESLA WAS THE BEST INVENTOR EVER, EDISON WAS A MEANIE WHO STOLE ALL OF HIS INVENTIONS AND WE WOULD HAVE HOVERCRAFTS AND CATGIRLS IF HE WASN'T SCREWED OVER I'm not saying he wasn't a genius, but god fucking damn these retards are everywhere
Can't wait to shitpost on the galactic version of Yas Forums >HU WANT SOME BHC! >"Oh, fuck, here we go again, go back to your shit planet" >"lol, planet shitters" >TENTACLES OR GTFO! LMAO
Gavin Taylor
Honestly, promoting intersexuality would unironically be the best way to build a congenial attitude toward ayys altogether, where humans are concerned. Give em big eyelashes and a little blush here and there, and just about anything can be made attractive, physically.
Dominic Phillips
BOY, YOU GOT FLEEBETTE FEVER!
Carson Sanchez
>I'm not saying he wasn't a genius so what are you saying moron
Julian Hall
Just hope it doesn't end up with earth becoming the Thailand of the galaxy, lol.
Zachary Anderson
A lot of English people believed 1666 would be the year of the apocalypse. You can’t really blame them. In late spring 1665, bubonic plague began to eat away at London’s population. By fall, roughly 7,000 people were dying every week in the city. The plague lasted through most of 1666, ultimately killing about 100,000 people in London alone — and possibly as many as three-quarters of a million in England as a whole.
Perhaps the greatest chronicler of the Great Plague was Samuel Pepys, a well-connected English administrator and politician who kept a detailed personal diary during London’s darkest years. He reported stumbling across corpses in the street, and anxiously reading the weekly death tolls posted in public squares.
In August of 1665, Pepys described walking to Greenwich, “in my way seeing a coffin with a dead body therein, dead of the plague, lying in [a field] belonging to Coome farme, which was carried out last night, and the parish have not appointed any body to bury it, but only set a watch there day and night, that nobody should go thither or come thence, which is a most cruel thing.” To ensure that no one — not even the family of the dead person — would go near the corpse or bury it, the parish had stationed a guard. “This disease making us more cruel to one another than if we are doggs.”
It felt like Armageddon. And yet it was also the beginning of a scientific renaissance in England, when doctors experimented with quarantines, sterilization and social distancing. For those of us living through these stay-at-home days of Covid-19, it’s useful to look back and see how much has changed — and how much hasn’t. Humanity has been guarding against plagues and surviving them for thousands of years, and we have managed to learn a lot along the way.
Jonathan Wright
When a plague hit England during the summer of 1665, it was a time of tremendous political turmoil. The nation was deep into the Second Anglo-Dutch War, a nasty naval conflict that had torpedoed the British economy. But there were deeper sources of internal political conflict. Just five years earlier in 1660, King Charles II had wrested back control of the government from the Puritan members of Parliament led by Oliver Cromwell.
Though Cromwell had died in 1658, the king had him exhumed, his corpse put in chains and tried for treason. After the inevitable guilty verdict, the King’s henchmen mounted Cromwell’s severed head on a 20-foot spike over Westminster Hall, along with the heads of two co-conspirators. Cromwell’s rotting head stayed there, gazing at London, throughout the plague and for many years after.