Thứ Tư, 27 tháng 12, 2017

Youtube daily Dec 27 2017

After French aircraft made it into the game,

the arrival of French ground forces was just a matter of time.

Now they're finally here!

But we actually started working on them a very long time ago.

We spent countless hours gathering data

that could help us produce quality models:

technical specifications, photos, video materials, technical manuals…

You get the idea.

We even looked through modeller's forums.

There is nothing like the real thing though.

In order to get the most accurate information on French armoured vehicles

and to confirm or invalidate data from different sources,

we had to examine those tanks with our own eyes.

The Saumur museum of armoured vehicles is one of the world's largest tank museums

and it has the definitive collection of French tanks.

It's decided then:

we have to send our team of artists and historians

to the the Saumur museum of armoured vehicles!

The management of the museum was very kind

and let us work with all the vehicles that we were interested in

even a few of those that weren't on public display.

This was an amazing experience.

Just think of it: some of the vehicles that we worked with were the last of their kind!

It was time to get to business.

Our colleagues had only one week

to measure up and photograph every single detail

of a whole army of tanks:

from the early tankettes of the 1930s to the modern marvels of technology.

Needless to say, it was no easy task!

One person used a ruler or a measuring tape, another works with a camera.

First they get the basic measurements: the length, the width and the height of a vehicle,

then they measure up components and details.

The last thing to check was the thickness of different parts of a vehicle.

We've worked with about sixty tanks... around sixty.

That's everything: all the measurements, photos.

Every tank has at least 200-300 photos and at least 20-25 minutes of video.

We worked the whole week from 9 to 5. We were the first to come and the last to go.

But all of that was only half the job.

We also wanted to record the sounds French tanks make.

That's why we also sent there a team of sound designers.

We recorded basically everything: the sound of engines on the move, hatches, turret traverse sounds…

The only thing that was missing were the sounds of shots.

When it comes to engine sounds, it is as realistic as it gets in a video game.

The sad truth is that there aren't many machines of the era that are still operational.

We were very lucky to be able to go there.

With all that data at our disposal,

it was time to organize these beautiful beasts of war into a research tree.

As with any other nations, the French ground tech tree consists of vehicles that belong

to a number of different categories:

light, medium, heavy tanks, SP guns and AA vehicles.

Each branch has some interesting choices at every rank

and many unusual machines.

There were at least a few tanks that were supposed to

be medium tanks, but received a bit of extra weight during development.

And it wasn't always clear why — they didn't get better armour

for example, they were outfitted with bigger key parts and components.

As a result the weight went through the roof and they had to be redefined as heavy tanks.

One of the examples is the AMX-50...

At the same time local engineers were very fond of oscillating turrets.

It was a very distinctive design choice that made it very easy to outfit tanks with autoloaders.

The French were probably the first, the first nation to use auto-loaders en masse.

Those weren't proper auto-loaders though, they were a kind of a loading mechanism

that allowed tank designers to get rid of a loader and use a crew of a smaller size.

This loading mechanism consisted of two revolver type magazines which contained shells;

they rotated — or, rather, were rotated by a commander or a gunner.

After a shot the energy of recoil compressed a spring

which was then used to load the next shell, which allowed for a faster reload time.

Another interesting fact is that the French at some point found themselves in control

of quite a few German military supply depots.

We, of course, couldn't pass up the opportunityto show that in the game.

This means that we'll have a high rank SP gun which has a German 20mm gun on its turret.

By the way, this is the same vehicle that has armour plates

that are so thick that they stop even some high rank HEAT shells.

This is the fearsome AMX 50 Foch.

A real beauty, eh?

We spent a lot of time and effort to bring French vehicles to the game. We hope you like it!

We literally put our heart into it. Hope you enjoy it!

The closed beta access to the French armour is already live.

Anyone who wants to join the fray can do it for free:

you just have to complete a number of simple tasks.

Another option is to buy one of the three special early-access packs from our store.

Each of them consists of a premium French tank

a few days of a premium account as well as a hefty sum in golden eagles.

Not to mention that these packs grant unlimited access to the new tech tree!

In other words, you are free to research anything you want.

Stay tuned — we have a lot of surprises for you!

As for now... let's enjoy the new exciting vehicles in update 1.75 «La Résistance»

And see you in battle!

For more infomation >> Obtaining «secrit» documents in Saumur (How we prepared for the French) - Duration: 7:02.

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10 "Generic" Product Names You Didn't Realize Were TRADEMARKS - Duration: 19:42.

A trademark usually presents itself in the form of a name, a logo, a design, or a phrase,

with the purpose of distinguishing one manufacturer's products from another.

Sometimes, however, when business is really good for a particular brand, or it has a head

start over the competition, then that particular brand might just become a proprietary eponym,

or generic trademark.

This means that if a product develops a substantial market share over the other manufacturers,

or it becomes well ingrained into the public consciousness, then its brand could replace

the name for the entire industry.

Take Xerox, for instance.

When it comes proprietary eponyms, Xerox may be the one most often given as an example.

Xerox is actually a corporation that sells a variety of things, among which are photocopiers.

But that 'Xerox machine' from your work may not, in fact, be a Xerox after all.

And Xerox is not alone; Google, Pampers, and Tupperware are just a few other similar brands

that have become proprietary eponyms.

But while these are fairly well known as actual trademarks, there are a lot of others out

there – so common and so widespread – that chances are that you might have never guessed

them to be brand names in the first place.

To be fair, though, some have since lost their legal protection as trademarks and are now

considered to be part of the public domain.

10.

Dry Ice

If you're not familiar with the term, or even with what dry ice actually is, you may

not be alone.

Nevertheless, if you've ever been to a Halloween party, a nightclub, or a theatrical play,

and there was some sort of ground-level mist involved, then there's a chance you were

close by to where dry ice was being submerged in hot water.

There are several other means of producing that sort of fog (like liquid nitrogen, for

example) but dry ice works almost equally as well.

It's cheaper, too, so there's that.

In any case, the entertainment industry isn't the main business for dry ice – it's refrigeration.

Sometimes known as Cardice, especially by the British, dry ice is actually solid CO2.

Because it's much cooler than regular ice, dry ice makes for a great refrigerant, especially

when mechanical cooling isn't possible or required.

This means that you'll oftentimes come across it when dealing with ice cream street vendors,

or people carrying around organs or other biological samples.

Because it doesn't alter quality or taste, dry ice is frequently used to instantly freeze

various foods and oils.

Firefighters sometimes use it to extinguish fires and plumbers utilize it to flash freeze

some water pipes.

You'll find some in school labs on occasion, or when people try to preserve ice sculptures.

You can also use it as bait for mosquitoes and bedbugs, since these insects are drawn

to CO2.

Just sayin'.

Dry ice was discovered back in 1835 by the French inventor Adrien-Jean-Pierre Thilorier,

who described it in one of his works.

In 1897, an Englishman by the name of Herbert Samuel Elworthy received a patent for solid

CO2 and used it to create soda water for his whiskey.

But the device he invented was so big and cumbersome that people rarely used it.

It was Thomas Benton Slate, an American businessman, who really took advantage and in 1924 applied

for a patent in the US.

One year later, he founded the DryIce Corporation of America and began selling solid CO2 under

the trademark of "Dry Ice."

The other name,

Cardice, short for carbon dioxide ice (the one the British are more familiar with) is

also a registered trademark of Air Liquide Ltd. in the UK.

9.

Band-Aid

By the 1920s, Johnson & Johnson was already a well-established company that manufactured

ready-to-use surgical dressings.

They made large, sterile gauzes that were sealed against germs and sold in various hospitals.

The fabric itself originated in Palestine, and the name gauze is said to derive from

the city of Gaza, an important center of weaving in the region back in medieval times.

Nevertheless, Johnson & Johnson's gauzes, which were used solely as dressings, were

the first of their kind.

An employee by the name of Earl Dickson, who was a cotton buyer at the company, was also

recently married to a woman by the name of Josephine.

And as it turns out, Josephine was a bit of a klutz, constantly getting burnt or injured

around the house – nothing serious, mind you, but enough to become a constant nuisance

for the newlyweds.

Her husband, being in the industry, decided to help, but the surgical dressings Johnson

& Johnson were providing were too big for the minor injuries Josephine was suffering

on an almost daily basis.

In a moment of pure inspiration, Earl Dickson cut out a small square from one of the gauzes

and stuck it to one of his wife's fingers with a piece of adhesive tape.

Knowing full well that this would not be a one-time thing, he began his own small-scale

production of these… well, "Band-Aids"… to have ready around the house whenever his

wife needed one.

In order to keep the two adhesive parts from sticking together, as well as to keep the

dressing sterile, Earl lined them with some crinoline fabric.

The two soon realized that their invention had a potentially huge market, and Earl presented

his idea to his boss, James Johnson.

In 1924, Johnson & Johnson introduced their adhesive bandages under the Band-Aid trademark.

After several more improvements, and after a genius marketing campaign of giving out

an unlimited supply of free Band-Aids to all the Boy Scouts in the country, the adhesive

bandage became a common household item across America.

To date, Johnson & Johnson estimates that they've sold over 100 billion around the

globe.

And as thanks for his invention, Earl Dickson was given the position of Vice President at

the company until his retirement in 1957.

8.

Frisbee

Who would've guessed that the 1970s Frisbee craze began with apple pies?

Well, not just apple pies, but pies in general.

The story begins in 1871 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, when a man by the name of William Frisbie

opened the Frisbie Pie Company.

His pies became an instant hit with the students from all the universities nearby.

These pies came in tin plates which the students then began flinging at each other while yelling

"Frisbie!"

Fast forward to 1948 and we have the "Flying Saucer," a plastic version of those tin

plates, reinvented by Walter Frederick Morrison and Warren Franscioni.

The new name was aptly chosen as it was less than one year after the famed Roswell UFO

incident.

After the two parted ways in 1955, Morrison sold the renamed "Pluto Platter" to the

Wham-O toy company.

Wham-O, the company behind another well-known trademark, the Hula-Hoop, changed the flying

disc's name once again, this time to Frisbee – misspelling its original name in the process.

Then in 1967, Ed Headrick, the company's designer, added a series of raised, concentric

rings on its surface, along with several other features, in order to stabilize its flight,

and the modern Frisbee was born.

Thanks to an aggressive marketing campaign during the late '60s and early '70s, when

the company advertised disc-throwing as a sport, Frisbees began flying off the shelves,

and Wham-O sold over 100 million units by 1977.

Headrick himself came up with Frisbee Golf, while some high school students from Maplewood,

New Jersey, invented Ultimate Frisbee.

Today, millions of people worldwide throw flying discs around – not all of them being

original Frisbees, of course.

As of 1994, Mattel Toy Manufacturers are the owners of the trademark, after buying it from

Wham-O.

7.

Velcro

According to a 2002 episode from the live-action TV series Star Trek: Enterprise, it was actually

the Vulcans – an extraterrestrial species – who, during the 1950s, anonymously introduced

humanity to the wonder of technology that is Velcro.

Now, after some thorough investigation on our part, it seems that there are some inconsistencies

with that particular story.

As it turns out, the trademark brand 'Velcro', as well as the product it represents, the

hook-and-loop fastener, is actually the creation of a Swiss electrical engineer by the name

of George de Mestral.

And apparently, Star Trek was a work of fiction.

Who knew?

Anyway, in 1948, while on a hike through the woods, de Mestral began wondering how and

why so many burrs clung to his pants and his dog's fur.

On closer examination under the microscope, these burrs revealed their secret.

As a means of dispersing their seed, they make use of many tiny hooks that get attached

to all sorts of furs and fabrics belonging to unaware passersby, and hitch a ride to

another place.

Nature is truly amazing in its ingenuity, isn't it?

Probably after coming to the same conclusion about nature, de Mestral began working on

a fabric that would be able to mimic the same properties as burrs.

Initially made from cotton, the fabric proved vastly more effective with the arrival of

nylon, and de Mestral patented his invention in 1955.

The word itself, Velcro, is a combination of the French "velours" and "crochet,"

which in English translate to "velvet" and "hook."

He then began advertising it as the "zipperless zipper," but his idea didn't really catch

on with the public at the time.

Help finally arrived from the unlikeliest of places – NASA, to be more exact.

NASA used Velcro during the 1960s as part of their space program.

Thanks to the positive press it received, Velcro began being seen as the 'space-age

fabric' and various fashion designers started using it.

De Mestral sold the rights to his Velcro Company once it became successful, and even though

the original patent expired in 1978, the term is still a trademark controlled by the Dutch

Velcro company.

6.

Aspirin

As one of the oldest and most commonly used drugs around the world, aspirin is still one

of the most studied even to this day.

It is estimated that between 700 and 1,000 clinical trials are performed on it every

year.

Aspirin is also the first ever anti-inflammatory and pain reliever mentioned in history.

While not technically aspirin, its active ingredient, salicylic acid, was used as early

as antiquity.

Various medicines derived from willow and other salicylate-rich plants were found described

on scrolls in Egypt, as well as on clay tablets in Sumer, more than 5,000 years ago.

Even Hippocrates used to prescribe willow leaf tea to women undergoing childbirth.

During the 18th and early 19th centuries, various chemists experiment with willow bark

and other plants, slowly but surely narrowing down the active ingredient.

Then in 1828, a professor of pharmacy at Munich University in Germany was successful in extracting

it, and called it salicin.

Over the following several decades, other chemists discovered that the Spiraea ulmaria

(Meadowsweet) plant also contained salicylic acid, as well as coming up with better ways

of synthetizing it.

While working at the German pharmaceutical company Bayer, chemist Felix Hoffmann added

an acetyl group to salicylic acid and created acetylsalicylic acid.

This addition reduced the acid's previous irritant properties, and Bayer patented the

process.

The company then renamed this acetylsalicylic acid Aspirin and began selling it worldwide.

Bayer later sold off or lost the trademark for Aspirin in many countries.

The origin of the name Aspirin comes from the letter A, which stands for acetyl, and

Spir, which comes from Spiraea ulmaria (Meadowsweet).

The in was a common suffix used at the time for medicine.

In 1950, Aspirin entered the Guinness Book of World Records as the most commonly sold

painkiller in the world.

In the many trials it was subjected to since its invention, Aspirin was proven to be a

great cancer and heart-attack prevention drug, if taken regularly.

5.

Jet Ski

Do you, or someone you know, own a Jet Ski?

Well, is it a Kawasaki?

If it is, then yes, you have a Jet Ski.

If not, then what you, or your friend, have is a personal motorized watercraft.

Yes, Jet Ski is a trademark belonging to the Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. from Japan,

and all other similar products are commonly known as personal watercrafts, even though

most other manufacturers have their own trademark names for them.

Now, the history behind these personal watercrafts goes back to Europe during the 1950s, when

various motorcycle manufacturers were looking to expand their markets into other areas.

The first name ever given to these vehicles was water scooters, and the British company

Vincent produced roughly 2,000 Amanda water scooters.

Unfortunately for them, however, the trend didn't really catch on.

Over the following two decades, other companies like Mival introduced its Nautical Pleasure

Cruiser, but with a similar lack of success.

This is when an Australian motocross enthusiast by the name of Clayton Jacobsen II designed

and created his own version – but a model that would require the rider to stand up.

His real breakthrough here, though, was to replace the previous outboard motor with an

internal pump-jet.

During the mid-'60s, he sold his idea to the snowmobile manufacturer Bombardier, but

after it, too, failed to gather momentum, the company gave it up.

Jacobsen then sold his patent to Kawasaki, which produced its first model in 1973 and

named it the Jet Ski.

But because it was a stand-up personal watercraft, the Jet Ski didn't manage to draw in the

masses since it was somewhat difficult to maneuver, especially in choppy waters.

The breakthrough came several years later when newer models were designed so as to let

pilots sit, thus drastically increasing its stability.

Furthermore, it was now possible for two people to enjoy the ride instead of one, and thus

the social element was added into the mix.

Bombardier later got back into the game by creating their own line of personal watercrafts

known as Sea-Doo.

In fact, these Sea-Doos are the best-selling watercrafts in the world, surpassing even

the Jet Ski.

Yamaha is on the market with its own WaveRunners, while Honda entered the business in 2002 with

the AquaTrax.

4.

Bubble Wrap

This might come as a surprise to many – it certainly did for us – but Bubble Wrap was

originally invented to be some sort of high-end wallpaper.

Yes, back in 1957, two New Jersey engineers by the name of Alfred Fielding and Marc Chavannes

began by sealing two shower curtains together and trapping air bubbles inside – thus giving

their new wallpaper idea its unique texture.

Unfortunately (or not), their wallpaper business didn't take off, and they began looking

for other possible uses for their idea, including looking into greenhouse insulation.

And while Bubble Wrap does, in fact, have some insulating properties, this new venture

didn't pan out well either.

Not wanting to give up, Sealed Air Corporation's marketer, Frederick W. Bowers, struck a deal

with IBM in 1959 to package their new 1401 computers, and they've been making millions

of dollars annually ever since.

Recently, however, in a move reminiscent of a Bond villain, the Sealed Air Corporation

has decided to renounce the original Bubble Wrap and begin producing the unpoppable iBubble

Wrap.

But even though this move might seem like something done just for the sake of making

the world a little less entertaining and fun, there's some logic behind it.

As it turns out, Bubble Wrap takes up a lot of space when it's in storage – something

that's a big problem for many of their customers.

The new iBubble Wrap is shipped and stored completely deflated, thus taking up just 1/15th

the space.

Companies that use it can now inflate their iBubble Wrap on their own when they need it,

but because it no longer has individual air bubbles, but rather rows of bubbles connected

to each other, they are no longer poppable.

3.

Dumpster

Without the humble dumpster, our towns and cities would probably be a lot messier than

they are today.

Over the past 80 years, the dumpster has become a common sight throughout the United States,

and many other designs of these frontloader containers, as they are called, have been

in use throughout the world.

The first time the word 'dumpster' was used commercially was back in 1936, when the

Dempster Brothers Company from Knoxville, Tennessee, trademarked the term.

The word itself is a combination of those brothers' name, Dempster, with the word

'dump' – being used for their most successful front-loading container.

The novelty of these garbage containers were their side arms that allowed another of this

company's inventions, the Dempster-Dumpmaster garbage truck, to lift them up and dump their

contents directly inside.

This streamlined the whole garbage disposal process by up to 75% of the original time,

when garbage was usually being collected by horse-drawn carts.

Now, even though this idea spread throughout most of the world, the actual trademark Dumpster

didn't.

The British and Australians do sometimes call their own frontloader containers dumpsters,

but the wheelie bin and skip terms are more commonly used.

2.

Mace

When it comes to personal defense, pepper spray, more commonly known as Mace, is among

the best weapons to have on your person.

It incapacities without killing or seriously injuring someone, and its backstory is based

on the same idea.

Chemical Mace came into existence in 1965, after Allan Lee Litman, an inventor living

in Pittsburgh, alongside his wife, Doris, came up with the chemical formula and means

of dispersal.

It's important to mention that other similar pepper sprays existed before the Litmans got

into it, but they oftentimes fell short, either by accidentally afflicting the sprayer, or

taking too long to activate and deter the attacker.

Prior to starting work on Chemical Mace, Allan Litman was working on such inventions such

as the "waterless egg cooker" and the "bacon cooker," but with very limited

success.

Nevertheless, after one of his wife's friends told them about how she got mugged while coming

home from work, they began discussing what self-defense weapons a woman could have at

her disposal in such a situation.

The two then began experimenting around the house with various chemicals such as kerosene,

Freon, and sulfuric acid as propellants for aerosol spray cans, as well as a wide array

of irritants.

They finally settled on chloroacetophenone – a chemical highlighted by the military

as being a potent tear gas during WWII.

Initially calling it Tear Gas Aerosol Spray Instrument, or TGASI, they eventually decided

on Chemical Mace – in reference to the spiked club of medieval times and the effects it

had on a person's face; though without the actual physical harm and, y'know… crushed

skull.

The two inventors then opened a business known as the General Ordnance Equipment Corporation

and began selling their Mace to the public.

Now, its active ingredient wasn't something new, but the fact that the Litmans managed

to repackage a chemical weapon as a civilian product was – and its success was almost

instantaneous.

In 1987, Litman accepted an offer from the gun manufacturer Smith & Wesson to buy the

company, and he became director of their nonlethal weaponry research.

The active ingredient has since changed to oleoresin capsicum, which is less toxic and

has a faster incapacitating property.

1.

Heroin

"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it," and this rings

especially true in reference to today's opiate epidemic and the appearance of heroin

on the world stage.

As most of us know, heroin is a Schedule I controlled substance, known in the pharmaceutical

industry as morphine diacetate, or simply, Diamorphine.

Diamorphine was first synthetized in 1874 in England, but it took another 23 years before

it became popular.

Chemist Felix Hoffmann, working at the pharmaceutical company Bayer and the aforementioned inventor

of Aspirin, was looking for a safer and less addictive alternative to morphine in 1897.

It, uh… didn't work out like he planned.

He was hoping to produce codeine by acetylating morphine, but instead ended up with diacetylmorphine,

which is two times more potent.

The head of Bayer's research department reportedly came up with its name of Heroin

from the German word "heroisch" – meaning 'heroic' in English and implying the drug's

strong effects on its user.

Bayer then began selling diacetylmorphine under the trademark Heroin and marketing it

as a safer and non-addictive substitute to morphine, as well as a cough suppressant.

Its primary consumers were middle and upperclass women, who bought it for their medicine cabinets.

It took 17 years before the US government began regulating it, and yet another 10 years

before people realized Heroin's actual effects and the United States banned its sale, importation,

and manufacture.

One year after that, in 1925, the Health Committee of the League of Nations also banned it, but

it was in 1930 when all of its other derivate analogues were also banned.

After WWI, Bayer lost its trademark rights over Heroin as part of the 1919 Treaty of

Versailles.

The US went through two major heroin epidemics after that: the first after WWII, and the

second during the Vietnam War.

Today, however, with various opioids being loosely prescribed by doctors around the country,

heroin use has also seen a fivefold increase over the past decade.

For more infomation >> 10 "Generic" Product Names You Didn't Realize Were TRADEMARKS - Duration: 19:42.

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BREAKING!!! They Just Plotted To TAKE OUT TRUMP!! TREASON! - Duration: 5:46.

BREAKING!!!

They Just Plotted To TAKE OUT TRUMP!!

TREASON!

Since Donald Trump was elected as president, the left has been doing whatever they can

to remove him from office by peddling lies to the American people.

These spiteful liberals cannot accept the truth that Trump is in fact, the president

of the United States and beat Hillary Clinton, so instead, they will continue to fan the

flames of division to create as much dissent as possible.

The first tactic the left focused on was the bogus Russian collusion story, and as time

passed the entire narrative began to blow up in their faces.

Every time the left thought they had a piece of so-called "evidence" to tie Trump to

the Russians, it turned out to be a Clinton operative which has only frustrated the Democrats

to no end.

Now, these hateful individuals are focusing on a new tactic to remove President Trump

from office and is employing those in his very own cabinet.

Over the past year, the left has been throwing one heck of a temper tantrum and looking for

any way they can to remove Trump from office.

These radical liberals have made audacious claims about President Trump stating that

he stole the election from Clinton to being a sexual predator.

Though there is one claim that the left has made over the past several months that is

somewhat concerning.

The left has said on numerous occasions that Trump is unfit to be president based on his

brashness and his affinity for tweeting on Twitter.

Now, those calls had only grown louder over the last several weeks after Trump slurred

his speech in one speaking engagement, and again when he grabbed a water glass with two

hands.

The calls have grown so loud that many on the left have said that they need to invoke

the 25th amendment as grounds for removal to "save the country."

While these threats have come from liberals in office it has now been revealed that members

of Trump's cabinet are discussing using this option, which proves how deep the swamp

really goes.

Here is more from The Washington Times:

Some members of President Trump's own Cabinet have discussed plans to remove him from the

White House, according to Roger Stone, Mr. Trump's former presidential campaign adviser.

Mr. Stone claimed during a recent interview aired on C-SPAN that he heard that, some members

of Mr. Trump's administration have weighed whether they can invoke the 25th Amendment

to take him out of office.

"Do you have any evidence that anyone is actively plotting or attempting or laying

the groundwork right now inside the Cabinet — inside the administration — to make

that removal?"

Associated Press reporter Tom LoBianco asked Mr. Stone.

"I have sources, and I work my sources, and yes, I believe there are some who have

had this discussion.

This is both outside the Cabinet and in.

I think it's the fallback plan for the establishment.

That's why I'm trying to sound the clarion call," Mr. Stoneresponded.

Mr. Stone declined to disclose specifics when pressed for further details, but he insisted

his claim wasn't baseless.

"Like you Tom, I cannot reveal those sources, and I'm not prepared to do so, but this

is not a conspiracy theory," Mr. Stone told the reporter.

"There are members of the Cabinet who have had this discussion.

Let me just leave it at that," Mr. Stone added.

Mr. Stone, 65, advised Mr. Trump's successful 2016 campaign through August 2015, and currently

he co-hosts an internet and radio program, "War Room," produced in connection with

far-right conspiracy theorist and devout Trump supporter Alex Jones.

Mr. Stone previously advised former President Richard Nixon and co-founded a lobbying firm

in 1980 with Paul Manafort, Mr. Trump's former 2016 campaign chairman.

Mr. Manafort is one of four people indicted as a result of special counsel Robert Mueller's

investigation into the 2016 election, and Mr. Stone predicted that the outcome of that

probe will have an effect on potentially removing the president from office.

"You're going to see an enormous uptick in these irresponsible stories smearing this

president as you know, non-compos mentis — not up to the job, and so on — particularly

if Mr. Mueller should shoot and miss.

So I'm being realistic about what I believe is the resolve of many in the political establishment

to remove the president under any means necessary," Mr. Stone said during the C-SPAN interview.

"There is a plan afoot that is broader than just the Cabinet.

The 25th Amendment requires a majority of the Cabinet and the vice president [to remove

the president].

I don't think that is achievable today, not on the heels of the historic tax cut,

not on the heels of the disintegration of the credibility of the Mueller investigation.

But we have seen what happens when a hysteria is whipped up among the people by some in

the mainstream media.

And I have always thought this is plan B for the two-party duopoly that has run this country

into the ground," Mr. Stone added.

The White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment concerning Mr. Stone's

claim.

Now, more than ever we need to stand behind Trump since there are those who are actively

doing their best to remove him from office.

The elites are so angry that, Trump is dismantling everything they worked so hard for over the

last eight years to implement the New World Order, and they won't go away quietly.

The plan was for Hillary Clinton to get elected so she could issue the final death blow to

our country, and with Donald Trump in office, their plans have been thwarted.

One can only hope that this is not true but considering that Trump is putting America

first, and not the globalist agenda it cannot be easily dismissed as a possibility which

is terrifying.

what do you think about this?

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