Another naked Biden

Yes the Biben men seem to like to take pictures of themselves naked with strange people in strange positions .
And both claim some evil mystery sneaky Russian or mystery hacker is responsible instead.telling the truth about what happened and admit the truth.
 
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Yes the Biben men seem to like to take pictures of themselves naked with strange people in strange positions .
And both claim some evil mystery sneaky Russian or mystery hacker is responsible instead.telling the truth about what happened and admit the truth.
Your obsession with pictures of naked men is amusing
I hope you keep it to over 18 for moral and legal reasons
 
Your obsession with pictures of naked men is amusing
I hope you keep it to over 18 for moral and legal reasons
Non-Christian elites in America have long been involved with perversions of all sorts, mimicking some of Hitler's worst views and values and participating in some of the worst atrocities imaginable. Most Americans are aware of the experiments government scientists conducted on blacks before and after WW2. Evolutionists inspired social experiments such as those followed by Hitler in his effort to create a master race.

Strangely, Ivy league schools in America were also conducting research that crossed the lines of morality, reasonableness, and even legality. This is about the widespread practice of requiring incoming freshmen to submit to nude photos taken by school officials for shady or false reasons.

THE GREAT IVY LEAGUE NUDE POSTURE PHOTO SCANDAL - The New York Times (nytimes.com) 1-15-95

THE GREAT IVY LEAGUE NUDE POSTURE PHOTO SCANDAL
By Ron Rosenbaum

Jan. 15, 1995
 
Non-Christian elites in America have long been involved with perversions of all sorts, mimicking some of Hitler's worst views and values and participating in some of the worst atrocities imaginable. Most Americans are aware of the experiments government scientists conducted on blacks before and after WW2. Evolutionists inspired social experiments such as those followed by Hitler in his effort to create a master race.

Strangely, Ivy league schools in America were also conducting research that crossed the lines of morality, reasonableness, and even legality. This is about the widespread practice of requiring incoming freshmen to submit to nude photos taken by school officials for shady or false reasons.

THE GREAT IVY LEAGUE NUDE POSTURE PHOTO SCANDAL - The New York Times (nytimes.com) 1-15-95

THE GREAT IVY LEAGUE NUDE POSTURE PHOTO SCANDAL
By Ron Rosenbaum

Jan. 15, 1995

its you and your boyfriend who are obsessed with naked men. lol
 
its you and your boyfriend who are obsessed with naked men. lol
At least I didn't go to an ivy league school where perverts made incoming freshmen strip for nude photos for the narcissistic pleasure of the profs.

The naked truth about Yale’s posture program | Memories | Yale Alumni Magazine 6-22-15



Memories
Recollections of Yale, across the decades. Send your own memories to be considered for posting to yam@yale.edu, with subject line “For Memories.”
Print | Email | Facebook | Twitter | RSS
< A Fasching party at HGSThe swimming lesson >
The naked truth about Yale’s posture program
By Andrew Letendre ’58 | 2:09pm June 22 2015
Ron Rosenbaum ’68 broke the story in a 1995 New York Times Magazine article.​
My first weeks at Yale in 1953 were filled with all sorts of interviews and tests, written and physical. I got through the written ones with no problems. The physical ones were a different story. Our class had to report to the Payne Whitney Gym, that temple of male physicality, to be sure we were fit enough to be Yalies. We had to do sit ups, pull-ups, short runs. I got through those, barely.
Speaking of barely, there was one test waiting for us that I had not expected. We were going to have to pass through Yale’s famous, or infamous, “posture screening.”
After the “easy” physical stuff, we were sent back to the lockers, told to disrobe, and then led naked to a nondescript door. As we waited in line, we were approached by either bursary boys or graduate students, whose job it was to tape thin black metal rods along our backs and chests as well as strategic points on our hips. Once “hooked up,” we moved one by one into a darkened, windowless room. When I entered the room, looking like a porcupine, I noticed a raised platform with full-length mirrors on three sides, much like the mirrors you see in clothing stores. I was told to step up on the platform, hold still. Suddenly, a burst of blinding lights flashed for a few seconds and a camera captured me in the round in all my nakedness!
“Next!” I moved off the platform. I asked one of the attendants what this was for, and he told me this was part of Yale’s posture program. “If you don’t pass, you’ll be enrolled in our posture improvement class.” Upon further questioning, I learned that the three-sided view these photographs provided revealed “posture defects” wherever the rods crossed, pinpointing areas needing “remediation.”
It was a humiliating experience, yet neither I nor any of my classmates questioned it. Just like the “poor little lambs,” we went along with it. Our fear of challenging Yale’s authority so early in our career trumped our feelings of embarrassment and the blatant invasion of our privacy.
Over the next few days, the naked pictures were the talk of the Old Campus. We tried to soften our embarrassment with humor. Everyone seemed to have a quip: “Do they come in wallet size? Mine wouldn’t fit in a wallet!” “Can I get it framed?” In time, the incident faded as the pressures of daily classes, quizzes, and term papers increased. It would make a good party story years later. Dick Cavett ’58 even made it part of his early stand-up act.
It was not until a New York Times Magazine article (“The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal”), by Yale graduate Ron Rosenbaum ’68, appeared in 1995 that I learned that the photos of Yale’s prominent graduates and future celebrities, professionals, business leaders and politicians—and me—were hidden away in files to be “studied” for things other than posture defects.
Yale and the Ivy League were not alone in these intrusions into privacy, Rosenbaum reported. The “Seven Sisters” schools took their share of student nude photos, including those of future politicians, writers, and celebrities.
The program had been in existence since the ’40s. There was widespread speculation that the photos were part of a study to map the morphological characteristics of a super race—shades of the Nazis. Rosenbaum quotes from a letter to the Times by Yale art history professor George Hersey ’54MFA, ’64PhD, suggesting this theory: “The reigning school of the time, presided over by E. A. Hooton of Harvard and W. H. Sheldon”—who directed an institute for physique studies at Columbia University—“held that a person’s body, measured and analyzed, could tell much about intelligence, temperament, moral worth and probable future achievement. The inspiration came from the founder of social Darwinism, Francis Galton, who proposed such a photo archive for the British population.” Rosenbaum went on to speculate: “The Nazis compiled similar archives analyzing the photos for racial as well as characterological content (as did Hooton).”
Others, including the tobacco industry, believed that these photos might be used to identify body types of men more likely to smoke cigarettes.
The photography was discontinued in the late ’60s after word got out that pictures of naked Vassar women had been stolen and were circulating outside the academic world. More sensitive and responsible administrators ended the program and attempted to destroy the stores of naked student photos. But not all photos were destroyed. Some, including those from numerous Yale classes, wound up in some dark corner of the Smithsonian Institute, where they remained until after Rosenbaum’s revelations.
Unfortunately, I failed the photo shoot and was assigned to the remedial posture program headed by Delaney Kiphuth ’41, son of Bob Kiphuth, Yale’s renowned swim coach. As hard as he tried to straighten our backs, most of us clung to the casual Yale slouch. _____________________________________________
The Yale Alumni Magazine is published by Yale Alumni Publications Inc., an alumni-based nonprofit that is not run by Yale University. Its content does not necessarily reflect the views of the university administration.
Filed under posture photos, Ron Rosenbaum, Dick Cavett
< A Fasching party at HGSThe swimming lesson >

The comment period has expired.
Welco
 
At least I didn't go to an ivy league school where perverts made incoming freshmen strip for nude photos for the narcissistic pleasure of the profs.

The naked truth about Yale’s posture program | Memories | Yale Alumni Magazine 6-22-15



Memories
Recollections of Yale, across the decades. Send your own memories to be considered for posting to yam@yale.edu, with subject line “For Memories.”
Print | Email | Facebook | Twitter | RSS
< A Fasching party at HGSThe swimming lesson >
The naked truth about Yale’s posture program
By Andrew Letendre ’58 | 2:09pm June 22 2015
Ron Rosenbaum ’68 broke the story in a 1995 New York Times Magazine article.​
My first weeks at Yale in 1953 were filled with all sorts of interviews and tests, written and physical. I got through the written ones with no problems. The physical ones were a different story. Our class had to report to the Payne Whitney Gym, that temple of male physicality, to be sure we were fit enough to be Yalies. We had to do sit ups, pull-ups, short runs. I got through those, barely.
Speaking of barely, there was one test waiting for us that I had not expected. We were going to have to pass through Yale’s famous, or infamous, “posture screening.”
After the “easy” physical stuff, we were sent back to the lockers, told to disrobe, and then led naked to a nondescript door. As we waited in line, we were approached by either bursary boys or graduate students, whose job it was to tape thin black metal rods along our backs and chests as well as strategic points on our hips. Once “hooked up,” we moved one by one into a darkened, windowless room. When I entered the room, looking like a porcupine, I noticed a raised platform with full-length mirrors on three sides, much like the mirrors you see in clothing stores. I was told to step up on the platform, hold still. Suddenly, a burst of blinding lights flashed for a few seconds and a camera captured me in the round in all my nakedness!
“Next!” I moved off the platform. I asked one of the attendants what this was for, and he told me this was part of Yale’s posture program. “If you don’t pass, you’ll be enrolled in our posture improvement class.” Upon further questioning, I learned that the three-sided view these photographs provided revealed “posture defects” wherever the rods crossed, pinpointing areas needing “remediation.”
It was a humiliating experience, yet neither I nor any of my classmates questioned it. Just like the “poor little lambs,” we went along with it. Our fear of challenging Yale’s authority so early in our career trumped our feelings of embarrassment and the blatant invasion of our privacy.
Over the next few days, the naked pictures were the talk of the Old Campus. We tried to soften our embarrassment with humor. Everyone seemed to have a quip: “Do they come in wallet size? Mine wouldn’t fit in a wallet!” “Can I get it framed?” In time, the incident faded as the pressures of daily classes, quizzes, and term papers increased. It would make a good party story years later. Dick Cavett ’58 even made it part of his early stand-up act.
It was not until a New York Times Magazine article (“The Great Ivy League Nude Posture Photo Scandal”), by Yale graduate Ron Rosenbaum ’68, appeared in 1995 that I learned that the photos of Yale’s prominent graduates and future celebrities, professionals, business leaders and politicians—and me—were hidden away in files to be “studied” for things other than posture defects.
Yale and the Ivy League were not alone in these intrusions into privacy, Rosenbaum reported. The “Seven Sisters” schools took their share of student nude photos, including those of future politicians, writers, and celebrities.
The program had been in existence since the ’40s. There was widespread speculation that the photos were part of a study to map the morphological characteristics of a super race—shades of the Nazis. Rosenbaum quotes from a letter to the Times by Yale art history professor George Hersey ’54MFA, ’64PhD, suggesting this theory: “The reigning school of the time, presided over by E. A. Hooton of Harvard and W. H. Sheldon”—who directed an institute for physique studies at Columbia University—“held that a person’s body, measured and analyzed, could tell much about intelligence, temperament, moral worth and probable future achievement. The inspiration came from the founder of social Darwinism, Francis Galton, who proposed such a photo archive for the British population.” Rosenbaum went on to speculate: “The Nazis compiled similar archives analyzing the photos for racial as well as characterological content (as did Hooton).”
Others, including the tobacco industry, believed that these photos might be used to identify body types of men more likely to smoke cigarettes.
The photography was discontinued in the late ’60s after word got out that pictures of naked Vassar women had been stolen and were circulating outside the academic world. More sensitive and responsible administrators ended the program and attempted to destroy the stores of naked student photos. But not all photos were destroyed. Some, including those from numerous Yale classes, wound up in some dark corner of the Smithsonian Institute, where they remained until after Rosenbaum’s revelations.
Unfortunately, I failed the photo shoot and was assigned to the remedial posture program headed by Delaney Kiphuth ’41, son of Bob Kiphuth, Yale’s renowned swim coach. As hard as he tried to straighten our backs, most of us clung to the casual Yale slouch. _____________________________________________
The Yale Alumni Magazine is published by Yale Alumni Publications Inc., an alumni-based nonprofit that is not run by Yale University. Its content does not necessarily reflect the views of the university administration.
Filed under posture photos, Ron Rosenbaum, Dick Cavett
< A Fasching party at HGSThe swimming lesson >

The comment period has expired.
Welco

nope, you're a pervert right here who obsessed about naked men and what they do in their bedroom. lol
 
nope, you're a pervert right here who obsessed about naked men and what they do in their bedroom. lol
You are the one always calling for proof so you are under your own obligation to prove your slanderous allegations against me and against Trump.
 
Your obsession with pictures of naked men is amusing
I hope you keep it to over 18 for moral and legal reasons
No obsession over naked men I just find it interesting they like to take nude pics of them self and both claim they have been hacked and whacked .It .Seems the Biden have a little problem in the area of sexual perversions and being nude . That is interesting , are they sicko or weirdo or sexual perverts , is it a family trait that is genetic like yours . naturally you do not see the humor in the situation .
 
No obsession over naked men I just find it interesting they like to take nude pics of them self and both claim they have been hacked and whacked .It .Seems the Biden have a little problem in the area of sexual perversions and being nude . That is interesting , are they sicko or weirdo or sexual perverts , is it a family trait that is genetic like yours . naturally you do not see the humor in the situation .

omg you post about gay men all the time. lol and started a thread about a naked man.

you idiots obsess about gay men and their sex lives more than gays do. hahahahhahahahahahah
 
omg you post about gay men all the time. lol and started a thread about a naked man.

you idiots obsess about gay men and their sex lives more than gays do. hahahahhahahahahahah
No we find it funny that the bidens like to get naked take pictures of them selves nude and keep blaming they have been hacked .
Reminds me of several other famous democrats such as Anthony Weiner. and Book from Florida same type of story only she claimed sexual abuse, Sue Gibsons and several others . Its amusing .they all similar claims .
 
No we find it funny that the bidens like to get naked take pictures of them selves nude and keep blaming they have been hacked .
Reminds me of several other famous democrats such as Anthony Weiner. and Book from Florida same type of story only she claimed sexual abuse, Sue Gibsons and several others . Its amusing .they all similar claims .

yes you can't stop thinking about naked men pictures and their anatomy. weird but whatever.
 
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