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User: KudyardRipling

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Comments · 515

  1. Re:Purpose ? on Are Wikileaks Servers In a Nuclear Bunker? · · Score: 1

    Satellites can be shot down.

  2. Re:Nuclear bunkers obsolete on Are Wikileaks Servers In a Nuclear Bunker? · · Score: 1

    Don't let Adam Selene hear that. Oh, wait...

  3. The price of knowing who one really is... on Privacy Fears Send DNA Tests Underground · · Score: 1

    There has been a phenomenon of individuals researching their suspected Jewish ancestry who are undergoing genetic testing for this express and exclusive purpose. This process has been used to confront the denials of living family members about their family history. Nowadays, more and more people are questioning America as a viable place to raise a family that could be targeted for their ethnicity by the results of changing demographics (Thank Hart-Celler for that). Such people now have the fear of having this information diverted for such nefarious purposes. Imagine the irony: "Without my knowledge, I have obtained an Israeli passport at the price of private health insurance coverage" or even worse "This pursuit has left me with no claim to an alternate citizenship AND, by reason of this process, I have found myself being denied private health insurance coverage altogether."

    Downmodding constitutes antisemitism.

  4. Re:False positives - false incrimination on Airport Security Prize Announced · · Score: 1

    We're talking about traces of such materials on clothing. Some female removed her nail polish before going on a flight, its vapors become trapped in the fibers of her clothing and the new equipment sensed acetone. Some farmer or homeowner stepped on stray fertilizer before going on a flight and the new equipment sensed nitrates. Someone was in a bathroom that had been sanitized with bleach and the droplets got onto the clothing and caused minute chemical reactions to produce substances that are deemed suspect to the new equipment.

  5. False positives - false incrimination on Airport Security Prize Announced · · Score: 1

    When word gets out that common household products can cause false positives, such as the cooling agent in cold packs (ammonium nitrate), nail polish remover (acetone) or even luncheon meats (nitrites), there shall be trouble. Then it's back to screwing the Fourteenth Amendment the old fashioned way: "Hey you swarthy bearded porkshunner, bend over for a prostate check!"

  6. Re:Nice distraction on US Set to Use Spy Satellites on US Citizens · · Score: 1

    Stupid voters are evidence that the media-educational-industrial complex has done its job. If someone were to pierce the veil of stupidity and people start paying attention, then wetwork would be required.

  7. I can just hear Chevy Chase's voiceover on Smart Rubber Promises Self-Mending Products · · Score: 1

    Five years ago, a team of scientists working at Uranus discovered a new polyester...

  8. Re:Absolutely Not on Should Addictive Tech Come With a Health Warning? · · Score: 1

    If an addiction to x makes people more productive, it would not be called an 'addiction to x'. It would be called 'x makes people more productive'. That is why caffeine will never become illegal.

    Diversity will only have been achieved when [insert extremist statement here].

  9. Re:I doubt you could be more wrong on US Set to Use Spy Satellites on US Citizens · · Score: 1

    One of the big problems is the reformulation of consumer products to preclude their use as weapons. Pool chlorinator used to be made of calcium hypochlorite and now its made of some organic compound that does not work well as the oxidizer in improvised black powder. Pool shock may still be made of Ca(ClO)2 , but I would not be surprised if photo ID is required for purchase whereas other products sold in the same establisments do not. Watch for acetone in nail polish to be replaced by ethyl acetate so as to preclude the manufacture of TATP.

    As for the military firing on its own citizens, that is one of the questions asked during the recruiting process. A reasonable person could conclude that the military as presently constituted has been prequalified for such a purpose. Don't be fooled by the media showing dysfunction in the military, for such is necessary for deception.

  10. Re:Nice distraction on US Set to Use Spy Satellites on US Citizens · · Score: 1

    Running for public office in the USA on such liberty issues is tantamount to suicide by [ CIA | FBI | DEA | ATFE | DHS | any such organization or angency that stands to profit from tyranny ]. 'Mysterious' car accidents and airplane crashes seem to always involve such people.

    There is no place for liberty-minded people among the populace consisting solely of servile money-minded professionals (a.k.a nonsexual prostitutes).

    Downmodding proves the veracity of the above statement(s) beyond question.

  11. Re:Free Ride.. on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 0

    The prosecution had better do a good job in [ convincing | scaring | coercing ] such a jury/panel about "becoming carbon-rich plasma" if they acquit as well as every federal judge up to Roberts of the Nine. Those black robes are not made of tungsten and carbon nanotubes, you know.

    Downmodding proves the veracity of the above statement beyond question.

  12. Re:Open source all of this stuff on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    One name for you: John Aristotle Phillips.

  13. Re:Why [ was | is | will be ] it always China? on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    Why does this sort of 'ethnionage' (a portmanteau of 'ethnic' and 'espionage' and not a lisp) work? 'Tis because the mirror does not recognize naturalization. When laws compel people against their better instincts, trouble invariably results.

    Some jobs were just not meant for some people. To disagree is suicide.

    Downmodding proves the veracity of the above statement beyond question.

  14. Re:Anyone remember Wen Ho Lee? on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    Was "naturalized" a necessary article in the description of the Chinese scientist? Whether we are naturalized or not, a US citizen is a US citizen, just as most people in the US have their roots from the Old World. Bullshark! The Fourteenth Amendment (the wellspring for all naturalizaion jurisprudence in the USA) was not properly ratified: see (Dyett v. Turner, 439 P2d 266 @ 269, 20 U2d 403 [1968]). Also, see YANKEE-WHITE security clearance.

    Too many attorneys would rather risk becoming carbon-rich plasma than to risk their bar license to push the above issue.

    Downmodding proves the veracity of the above beyond question.
  15. Re:And at what point do we close the doors on them on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    We are dealing with a society that allows complete economic freedom but exercises total political control. This is a culture that has been in the making for perhaps all of human history. The Tianamen students and the Falung Dafa offered alternatives to the political control and that is what the CCP fear the most and thus the crackdown.

    Unless you know for certain that the PRC's ICBM's and/or the blast/fallout cannot reach you hometown, remember one of the their offical's comment about "Los Angeles" in the 1990's concerning USA coming to Taiwan's aid should war arise.

    Downmodding proves veracity of the above beyond question.

  16. Re:Why is it always China? on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    I have one for you about that: Jonathan Pollard

  17. Re:Why is it always China? on Space Shuttle Secrets Stolen For China · · Score: 1

    ...because imaging devices (mirrors are no exception) are not fooled by abstractions including but not limited to the Fourteenth Amendment. Why is it that anyone with a J.D. is hellbent on ignoring Dyett v. Turner?

    Summary: Blood is thicker than water.

    Diversity is suicide.

    Downmodding will only serve to prove the veracity of the above beyond question, so don't waste the points.

  18. Re:Government Spyware on FBI Sought Approval To Use Spyware Through FISC · · Score: 1

    Would not the removal of such spyware constitute an admission of guilt like destroying a bug?

  19. Re:Terrorists never plan anything at home... on Does Anonymity In Virtual Worlds Breed Terrorism? · · Score: 1

    People are not willing to sacrifice their careers, properties and toys since they have worked so hard (evidenced by college debt, car debt, mortgages, credit card debt) for those. Freedom to pursue dreams becomes its own prison and thus serves the interests of the (police) state.

    For those whose backgrounds include such characteristics as servility and/or 'wise paternalism', the challenge is to lose one's originality (i.e. stop letting the mirror remind one of who and/or what one is) thus becoming a free man. That is the process of true liberation. Oh, wait...

    Downmodding proves veracity of the above beyond question; it's not worth the points.

  20. Re:Government for you. on Space Spotters Track Secret Satellites · · Score: 1

    The govt humanoids in response will look for those whose eyes 'wander too much' in their effort to thwart 'human cameras'. It's part and parcel of behavioral profiling. For all of you (dis)ability rigths folks out there, imagine a diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome and/or other disorders involving enhanced memory/recall abilities landing people on the no-fly list. This [ would be | is ] done with the understanding that if one is capable of malicious use of an ability, assume so and let 'due process' prove otherwise.

    Downmodding proves veracity beyond question. It's not worth the points.

  21. Re:RTFA on NYC Wants to Ban Geiger Counters · · Score: 1
    What it all boils down to is that according to these govt humanoids, people should have no right to protect themselves and have the duty to die at the request of the govt via false flag ops or otherwise. Consider the following comment obtained from the High Yield Detonatation Effects Simulator (HYDESIM) website:

    This makes people think as to how close to any major city (target) one may feel comfortable to reside. It begs the question: How close can one reside and work to a putative target to benefit from a city's higher wages, yet far enough to be safe from we-all-know-what? The usual situation is the closer one works to a target (higher wages) the farther from the target one can afford to live (more costly housing). The less one earns (by working in a job farther from a target) the closer one must live to that target (lack of affordable housing in more distant locations). My onsite service job involves major real estate franchies (sic); To date, I have never heard anything like this from the lips of real estate agents, but I keep my ears open for anything that hints of it.

    Here in northern New Jersey, I have overheard talk from emergency management officials that Interstate 287 (a ring highway surrounding the New York City area) has been regarded as a redline. Everything inside it is to be regarded as expendable (people and property). As an onsite computer technician, it is no surprise to me that the Wall Street has been moving their IT infrastructure out to places in Warren, Hunterdon and western Morris county along interstates 80 and 78. These are distant and upwind from NYC and Philadelphia (assuming the jet stream does not blow contrary to is normal westerly course) yet allows quick access by ground transport (or helicopter if need be). That's why I will not work in NYC, period. Why perish for a paycheck? People like us died in those towers, damn it!
  22. Re:Fun (Second Amendment) toy on New 4100 Lumen Flashlight Can Set Things On Fire · · Score: 1

    Retrofit the diode into a laser level or a Scophony-like scanner box made from laser printer image scanner assemblies (synchronized rotating mirrors mounted at right angles to sweep a raster).

  23. Re:Leg Hack on Bluetooth Prosthetics Help US Marine To Walk Again · · Score: 1

    Voodoo electronics, anyone? Kick someone in the backside, flip the finger, etc. It conjures up images of the Tin Man from the Wizard of Oz.

  24. Re:And for those with Prostrate/thyroid cancer? on Cell Phone Radiation Detectors Proposed to Protect Against Nukes · · Score: 1

    Americium 241 perhaps?

  25. Re:Of all races.. on Some People Just Never Learn · · Score: 1

    Only if someone mentions "Tay-Sachs" or other related disorders.