"Mata says the investigation is ongoing, and so far it's not clear if the employee had anything to do with the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol."
That was included out of nowhere and has nothing at all to do with anything else in the article. It wasn't even like it was a nearby borough or city to the Capitol to where mentioning the Capitol might have even been somewhat related simply due to a nearby proximity; it is the SJPD -San Jose (California) Police Department- and on the complete opposite side of the country from the Capitol.
Oh...this explains it:
By Duncan (((Sinfield)))(I misread the author name as a kike surname; it's not.)
Sinfield is not seinfeld. But yes. I was thinking the exact same thing
Thank you for noting that. I did misread it; not as 'Seinfeld', but as 'Sinfeld' - I failed to see the 'i' in 'field'.
This site notes about "Sinfield": https://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/Sinfield (https://archive.ph/aGojJ)
"Recorded as Senfield, Sinfield, Singfield, Sinfold, and even Sineeld, this is an English medieval surname. It is locational from Shinfield, a village in the county of Berkshire.
The derivation of the placename is from the pre 7th Century personal name "Scene", and the suffix "feol", meaning land cleared for agriculture; and hence more pragmatically Scene's farm. The place was first recorded in the famous Domesday Book of 1086 as Soanesfelt which does not say a lot for Norman spelling, as Shiningefeld in the Pipe Rolls of 1167; and as Sinningefelde in the Hereford Charters of 1269.
The personal name Scene is related to the Old High German sconea, and means beautiful, thus giving Shinfield the possible alternative meaning of "beautiful field". Locational surnames, such as this, were usually taken by the local lord of the manor, and later by former inhabitants of a place who had moved to another area, usually in search of work, and were thereafter identified by the name of their birthplace.
Recordings from surviving early church registers include the marriage of Christopher Senfeild at Toddington in Bedfordshire on November 12th 1581, the marriage of William Senfield and Catherine Clarke on January 2nd 1668; and the christening of Edward Sinfield on October 27th 1700, both at St. Giles' Cripplegate in the city of London. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling."
shabbos goys are just as dangerous as the parasites they work for
(post is archived)