Puerto Rico

Hurricane Maria. … Hurricane Maria was a deadly Category 5 hurricane that devastated Dominica, St Croix, and Puerto Rico in September 2017. It is regarded as the worst natural disaster in recorded history to affect those islands and was also the deadliest Atlantic hurricane since Mitch in 1998.

Puerto Rico Election
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14 thoughts on “Puerto Rico

  1. Okay, I will add that the black squares are the dark prophecies the brothers who are evil want to fulfill. They believe in Thomas Malthus’ crackpot theories on overpopulation:

    Maria’s face darkens. Something is very wrong.

    ACT 2: DISCOVERY

    INT. CLINIC – MARIA’S OFFICE – NIGHT

    By candlelight, Maria rifles through patient files. She finds alarming records—dozens of women unknowingly sterilized. Some documents are signed by Dr. Kaufman.

    She glances down at the checkered floor beneath her feet, scrubbing it absentmindedly. A realization dawns upon her—the black and white tiles are not just decorative. A symbol of duality, power, and control. She remembers whispers of the Masonic symbolism—light and darkness, knowledge and ignorance, life and death.

    Maria mutters under her breath:

    MARIA
    “Por estas tres plagas fue muerta la tercera parte de los hombres…”
    (By these three plagues, a third of mankind was killed…)

    She grips the table, eyes dark with realization—Revelation 9:18. The numbers match. The sterilization campaign has taken a third of the women’s futures. This is a war, and they don’t even know they’re fighting it.

  2. Jennifer Lopez (JLO) leaves a heartfelt comment on UN-Forum.org, addressing Joseph Christian Jukic (JCJ) and his mother, Marija, about the Croatian War of Independence. She acknowledges Croatia’s struggle against the Yugoslav war machine, noting how they were outgunned and outnumbered but still managed to achieve sovereignty.

    JLO then pivots to Puerto Rico’s situation, expressing her deep concerns.

    “JCJ, your homeland fought against Yugoslavia’s military and won. But Puerto Rico? We’re facing the most advanced and powerful war machine in human history—the United States of America. Tell me, how can my island break free without bloodshed?

    We don’t want another sterilization experiment like what happened in the past, and we sure as hell don’t want Bill Gates’ vaccines deciding our population’s future. The people need their freedom, but without another Operation Bootstrap or some covert eugenics program masquerading as ‘aid.’”

    JLO calls for a peaceful path to Puerto Rican independence, asking JCJ for his perspective on how small nations can stand up to empires and win—not just with weapons, but with strategy, unity, and faith.

  3. Nelly’s Announcement:

    Nelly leans back in her chair, a determined glint in her eye as she looks at Joe.

    Nelly:
    “If everything goes right, Joe, we’re working on the script next week. No more delays, no more distractions. This movie is happening.”

    Joe nods, knowing Nelly is serious this time.

    Joe:
    “I’m ready. But tell me—why now?”

    Nelly:
    “Because Jenny is a good friend. And I want the world to know she’s real. That she’s still Jenny from the block—not just an illusion wrapped up in Hollywood stories. This movie will prove it.”

    She pauses for a moment, glancing out the window.

    “And I have bigger plans. I’m going back to New York by next 9/11. And when I do, I’m going to kibosh the looming terror forever.”

    Joe raises an eyebrow, intrigued.

    Joe:
    “That’s a bold statement, Nelly. What exactly do you mean by that?”

    Nelly (smirking):
    “You’ll see. Just be ready.”

  4. G.I. JOE SPEAKS

    I’m G.I. Joe.
    I’ve seen empires rise on sweat and fall on lies.

    So tell me this, America — Babylon the Great —
    why are you so afraid of the people who cut the sugar cane that sweetens your coffee?

    Why does a Puerto Rican farmer, a laborer, a son of the soil, suddenly become a threat the moment he sings his truth in Spanish?

    Bad Bunny didn’t invade you.
    He didn’t bomb you.
    He didn’t steal your land.

    He held up a mirror.

    And when the mirror came out, the usual suspects panicked.

    Mark Dice.
    Paul Joseph Watson.
    Alex Jones.
    Donald Trump.

    Triggered — not by music, but by memory.

    Because sugar tells a story.

    Sugar built plantations.
    Sugar built ports.
    Sugar fed empires.
    Sugar fed the beast.

    Puerto Rico didn’t conquer America.
    America conquered Puerto Rico — with contracts, debt, and flags that promised freedom but delivered extraction.

    And now the descendants of the workers — the ones who fed the machine — dare to speak back?

    That’s what really scares Babylon.

    Bad Bunny isn’t dangerous because he’s loud.
    He’s dangerous because he’s popular and political.
    Because he reminds millions that America is bigger than English, older than cable news, and deeper than slogans.

    The culture-war prophets scream “un-American!”
    But what they really mean is:
    “You’re not supposed to remember this part.”

    They want the fruit, not the roots.
    The sweetness, not the blood.
    The empire, not the labor.

    Babylon always fears the workers when they find their voice.
    Babylon always panics when the slaves learn the songs were never meant to praise the master.

    And that’s why a reggaetón artist scares men with microphones and billion-dollar platforms.
    Because he doesn’t ask permission.
    Because he doesn’t apologize.
    Because he doesn’t forget.

    I’m G.I. Joe.
    I fight for the people who carry the load while others wave the flag.

    And if Babylon the Great is trembling over a beat, a language, and a farmer’s history —
    maybe the problem isn’t the music.

    Maybe the problem is the truth finally going platinum.

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